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I W J -- 1-F4-diL1--'. --- . wg . -,- ...tu .. 1-J -1 45- ,- f,.-,. 1-1 1 . , 1 4:04 -1 ' '- , . .. gl' 5... 4- ,xx di... -. K 3-N Q---v .- ns ni. -lit L '95-' I' ... W , , , . :. ,v- .-., 'glui' --a ja-fry' .mf ' N , -1.2.1,--' -. ' Q W: a 'Ng-F1 .,, Q,-.. sw ' -. -. Agp, .. u Q . h-H, u ,-- 'H x rdf . ...ny A JJ H Cf- 1 1 'TWf 'f .-5 L2 Q' .Q H,- 1 ll 9,1 me -ati? x 1'- I' , v ,. vm l 1' V. .. rr. '.V,. A,-In flarv . ,,,.v v,ft,,v5-..v. '. - -'xf-.1M . b My.. . ,. -.4 -- . .. i' JD ' ' .f f L- '5'-5.8-rv 1. I . 5 ., , . --ll. '. ' 1 .1 ,Y , t .. in, J. 1 H I., e V u 939' r 1 A. 1 2-'f ' A . , ' ,, -. - .,' 'fig fi w ITU. :ik ..-g..g',u'f ' T? . Hx - 'I xg, , I 1,1211 pq . Ax.. ., . fi. x, pax, ly . fi I AQ A ,- .' , ,NV . 1: 4 5 n. Y. .w A . '- 1. .n-- .,.-.L --- .-.34--M. 1 .'mJ.mf2' . -..-.!.Fl+:mifL. .mii .- . .V 3,15 .l 4 :L-S -...YU x v A' f 8f I mf- x ,. '1 I u 1 F J .1 rw , 1 V f., -w.-N?.....:1:.f-'- 1,1 -.pf : -4 r .1-x.'. ,,.wf4 :- wg vi- :H .Y Y jig., H .. - - x 1 ff--1--1.-.M --J V :ig -J.-.sy 'J . . an . w r , .Q-ri ' I, .. . 5, E? I W I The- I cl-IATHAMITEI I II936 X CHATHAM HALL I CHATHAM VIRGINIA I To A DOROTHY GRAY BALDWIN We dedicate this book in grateful appreciation of her understanding, interest, and help throughout the years we have known her. YQ v 1 THE CHATHAMITE DH. ICIJML T 1 M' R bl THE CHATHAMITE Lf f, fy ' jwffid LM WA.,-Cfxff I EDMUND J. LEE, M.A., D.D. HOPE MILLER Rector .S'inging MRS. EDMUND J. LEE PANSXZTANDRUS iano VIRGINIA HENRY HOLT, M.A. Dean MARTHA SCHMID, B.A. English Assistant Piano NONA D. BRAY GAIL HODGMAN History Dramatirs, Enylish LILLIAN HENSLEIGH, M.S. KATRINA CORBIERE Srivnrz' Athletic Direvtor f - MARGARET C. HANNA, B.s. HILDA BOEHM fs-60 X W Frcnrh, Dancing Assistant Atlrletir Director ' X . I o f -X 1, 7 L K SALLY R. THOMPSON, M.A. EDVVARDUVERNON BRUSH X 'F ,xfv 1 , I V I , ' 1 French Buszn1fssManag7cr X 4 K , , KJ D' 1, ELIZABETH SIMS, B.A. MARY .CONOYER BRUSH .K I.,-XX a Mathematics Rvgustration .Smvvfrzry I ARA LOVELAND, M.A. ANNA STEAD WARNOCK Religious Education .Svcrvtary ' ANNA A. ASGAARD, PH.B., M.A. DORIS TAYLOR g English, German .S'm'rrtary A' '-,U-V' HARRIET MONTAGUE, B.s. CORINNE D. DAVIS BJQ U, English Bookkruper , n - YTAQ, VIRGINIA STEWART, M,A, DR. HENRY H. HAMMER All Agvalgpj Latin Physivian V 'I DOROTHY GRAY BALDWIN, B.A., B.S. PEARL WILLIAMS , Librarian Resident Nursz' KATHARINE MARSHALL, B.A. LAURA K. POAGUE 4 Assistant Librarian, Mathwnatifs I N Ilousc Itlotlmr 'rw DOROTHY JONES CII V-mn LULU FELTS Home Economics Dietitian LARA LEA COUSINS I f ELIZABETH REID HERNDON f - ' Art My Laundry Superintendent NN 90.1 QM - . 5 I 9 3 693:-wgillq THE CHATHAMITE TH E CHATHAMITE BOARD la'flfilnr-in-I 'hirff ..... .,,, ,, , I IIIVIH-INl'I-I Sm I'l'I 1, ,INSUf'l'l!fl' la'flz'lor ....., Y,. I IU'l'll Mixm' I'1cxlf111:l.1I. H11.wf l1v.w.v ,Ilrnnlgw .,,.,, ..,,7, I IIIIHINIA I4'.xlHc, :ISSI-Nllllll lf!!-Vl.IIf'N-Y AIlllIIlljjf'I' Y,,,,, ,Y,,,. I l1A:l,IcN 'l'.xY1,o1:, ' Lilfwury lifr'1'hn' ..II, ,,,, , vI.XXI'I'l' 1I1:liuol:Y flII..XlI.X IX1'l'l.1'1u.x'l'lf:. .I.v,w:'.vlrr11l l,ilf'1'f1ry l2I1lI'fIlI's,VH lI1c'l l'Y IIl:.xN1'lI. I l114:'1 rx' ZAISIIINKIIC. flrgfr11z'zf1!iun.w la'J'ilur ,..,.. ,,,,, ,,,,... . X NN I'Il.Y. ,Irl l9'flz'fm- ,I,,,, ,. ...l,l'c'm-V1'1.x Wmms. . QIXILXII lIIx1rxl..1lf:. Npm'ls lL'rl1frn:Q ,,,Y.., ,,,,, I I , , 2 If IIAXVICH IrlC'l l'I,l'1. lf'r1r'f11Il-if .I f71'i.wz'1' .... I .I., Miss S'l'1fZw II 1936 -r T'H E C H A'TIIAIM IT E Ku 1 N KL '1 4' V1 ' I 111,111.11 ,IiNI+1I'II1ANI'1 w.. In' -' -. . R X 1--. . -., - x' X'X D LQ 1- 1X k X X,--nxt -11 IGI 'xx 1 f, , Ll!--X .QI s 'uw NZ: 1 INA , -N NX 1 ,QQ ., Mimi. 1i 171 BI.XIII1.XI1IC'I' WHHIJS .11 Iil1'Ii .111111111-. I11'u11x1'1II1-. N-11' Mark I'IIl1l'I'l'II I 11II 1'I'5I' 9'-1-111111 I,1lI'I1Il' Y . .,-- ,Y, In1s11I1:1II 'I'11:1111. 103331 I i1'st I'111-l1I1- Ilzls- IwIl1:1II 'I'1-21111, 1512533 8131111111 I,l1I'I1I11S41l-- l'l'1' 'I'11:1111, 1212341 142111121111 First IIIII' 1Iu I S111'1'111' 'l'1-11111, 1112353 Vi1l'SI1X' SHl'l'l'I' VY H -wr . ' ' ' I1f1111. 11l.,.1. Il1':1111:1111- .XSSIIVIEI 1!lCI3-33133 .XsI1'r11111111.1' I1IIlI1. 111215-3453 . ,.,-. l lI1'K'I' II:11'v II11I11I11111s II1111:11'f1111'11I. 111233- 3113: SIIIIIIIIII l'1111111-il, 1935-31151 May l'c1111'f. 11121151 I'1'1-si1I1-111 S011i111' I I:1ss. 11135-2545. l r'r11'l1'.w.v IHIIIIII' 'limb sunrznwl 1111110 u11l'11.v. I 5-5 , y V jj vs? IN of I' .'5' . CPS wf I-,X 75 I Q 5 - . 1 . VI Iilggill' Av:-.. I'I1IHIll1lQl. I., I.. Nvw Xurlx .yn w- 1 IC11I111'1-nl I z1II. 191, I 1 'lI'St 1111111 I'511sIi1-I- Imll 'IH-11111, 15111 JP X Il -1 'Q -V71 Yi 'sity Ii11sIwtI1:1I1 Ikllll, 151.1-I-.1.1. IIISIV I111I1I S111-111-1 I1 1111 1034 I lllfllll I1 1111111 '11 1. ' - 1 . v' . 'z 2' 'VVS 1 5l'l'l'I Uillll, 1213551 Ya11's1t1' SOITEEI' 'I'1211111, V . , 1 s 1 I X II 111 111111111 Illlll 111 1 - -. : , fCf-I1Se1'- -ivy I1':1111, 151335: First lmI1I IIWIWX II.1CilIll. 121136: Firsf l1oIfI I zsvI111II 'I'c1z1111. 151114-255: Varsity Basv- l11II 'I1 1111 1014 31 111111111 I1 ll -1 -1-1 42 2- 101 4 ,Q ., -V- I1'z1111. 19314-2353 Yin-0-I'1'0si1I11111 Glu' I IIIIII. 1.13331-ZH: l'1'csi1I1-111 III1-v I1Il1Il, ' , -3'T-I ': II1':1111:1ti1 I IIIII, 1113121-Citi' l'I141i1' 1II'1'5'31i'I' X I' , 1 . 1 ..-1-V , .1. . , .v--v ..r , 4-ur, 41 1 , .,.' .y- zt' 1' . -5, '1 L11'111111 -i'fZ .4 ,1lIl'lII I1l1llIll'II , . 7 19.1.11 I'1'11s11I1-111 511111111111 I'1111111'1I, can pay. 1!PZ354I4i. rr' ix lily rluf' Hum lIHlI'IZ Harm nfl fx Q 1936 I 16,21 Ib .:' 'O ff 1-key Ixllkllll, -1'-1'. .1 'H of df 1 'T lv N Q' 1 ' ? THE CHATHAMITE it 1, Sy 1,'Lz'X11..X 11A111111'1c111'1'11 .1 .11'1'111c1i:A'1'11 21 1 1'i1ll1i11ll 1,1Ell'l', N1111'1'1S1UX1'Z1. Nvw -1t'l'Ht'y 1'1I111'1'l,'11 191111. 15131211 111'z1111a1t111 011111, 1 D 121:13-:11sg 1:1111 1 11111, 111:73-3111 1'I111i 111555-13131 111111111 1'11111, 15131131 131111 1111111 151355-23111 .xS11'l1l1l1Il1y Club, 151115-2313 '1'1'll111UI'2ll'j' 51111111111 1'l11l1ll'11, 1512355 As- 8151121111 l'111it111', l'l1111f111J11i11' 11121iLI21Z11l0 111211-21131 .Xss1s111111 l1i11'1'z11'y 1i1l111l11', 1 1'l111ll1z111l1'l1' Y1'z1.1' H11111i, 151235-211ig 11111 1,:1z11l1-1', 151235-21133 1'11z1i1'11111l1 3111111111 1,111 11l'l12ll'1I1l1'1l1, 151255-C1151 l.i101'z11'y 1'11'1'I1 1 7 1 1.135-2313: 1111ll11l' 111111, 1.135-51113 S1'1'111111 1111111111 11111'1i1'y 'l'1-11111. 11133-1: S111-111111 1,lll'111' S111'1'1'l' '1'l'1l111. 111211-E151 S1-1111111 I I 1 Y' l,111'I11l' 1411s1-111111 1l'2lll1, 1513-1 1 h11'S1 1'111'- 11111 li11s1-111111 '1'1'il1ll, 1513155 1111111111 T11u1'- 112l1111'111, 111115-31135 May 1101111, 15136. 7'l11'1'1' ix no 11l'Il1llS 111 Ziff' 11111 17111 11j!'Il1lLN of ffnzfrgy 111111 111'1'i1'i!y. 1936 11 .X HY 1'1 111 N 111111 A .X1'1'1,1+IG,X'l'lC 214 1'l'1l11'llll1il1 AWI1111' S1-wivklvy, l'1-1111sy1v:111i11 l4:1111'1'1'11 191111, 1112541 111'211llil11l' 1111111 1'12H-2353 .Xs11'11111m1y 1111111, 151215-313 Art 1'1ll11, 15135-33155 11111111 011111, 1512513 First 1111111 S11l'1'1'l' T1-11111, 121:34-215g Y111' 111' S171'l'1'1' '1xl'i1lIl. 1513153 Firsf 1111111 11111111-1111111 '1'1111111, 1111151 1111-11 1111111 1111l'1i1'j' T1111111. 1512151 S1-1111111 1111111 11l1l' .Nw , .i 1 'f' 'z S11l111'1l1 ku' 111111 111111 1111111111111 1'1111111'iI, 1112553 111-1111 11'1111'S112111, 151235 3511: May 1'11LlI'1, 151315. I Wh 1' 1'l1rl1l IVIIN 1'f111'1'f11i1'1n11l lIf'l'0I' prnzu 111111 11111111111 ul u'1'Il, IIIIIII yvl ll'1l-N 11111-11 lflflltlf. A . J' ry 1 V v ,I A , ,J .1 K! I. nJg'1 THE CHATHAMITE 1131 511111 .UNI lo ..g 500.51 iA-IL, -'g.uA'-g,.5 1 44,-ux -gllmv R . 1pxn,,,-, ,bidi 1 f,A,'f. ,Q Jhbdu- MANY 151'IX'1'1.I'1Y 111111111 171511 lfiftll .-X11-11111-. Y111111gs11m'11. 1111111 1'1lI11'l'l'l1 192111. 1113112 Sl'1'HIl1 ' 1 111-1 '1'1':1111. 1212151 '1'1-11111111':11'.1' S111111-11t 1, .2-T3 P i .,2 g. 1l'11ll1111l,Y 1'1l111. l!1235-2315: l'111111', 11151-1- 3151 1111-1 141ll11, 151:15-:11ag 1,1'1'N111l'111 11111 1'1l111, 111:15-:11i. l 1'11111 H111 Nlllllllllll' 111 H111 1'1'11'1'1'11l11 r'1'r' 1.1 1111! 1111' .vlr'l1. 1 X K MN XS -J 111 's ' . X ,I ,J .1 .A K Q wiv 1 1 11.XX1'1N 131111111111 1'3E'1 1',l11'I 1 ., 4. ' 1 4 11 115' ': .., - -1 -1- , . gg - , , . . . AY, V111 17 l11':1111a1111' .XHSll1'12l1IllIl, l!1.1:1- ..-,., 1113 111171 141ll11, 181113-21113 1Xs11'111111111y 1,- 111111, 19.1.1-13111 111111l':11'.Y l11I'K'1l', 111515- . 1 11111 1111111 11:1sk1-1111111 '1'1-11111. ' :we 1 . 151,111 fWl'l'll11l1 1111111 111 11111 111111 Y -1 1 .-1 1S1.111S1-11111111 1111111 5111111 1111111 1'1 11 First 1111111 112lSl'112l11 '1'11:1111. 1f1315g First 1 4 , .,,- 1111111 S1l1'1'l'1' '1'l'21l1l. 111121-353 Varsity g11l'1'l'l' '1'1'2l1ll, 111351-235: S1-11111111 1111111 111li'1i1'y V1'1'2l1ll, 15131 1 First 1111111 11111'1c1f.1' '111z1111, 111235-IHS: N'?l1'S11.Y 11C11'1il1.V '1'L'2llll. ' 1 . - 1'1'13'1l3' 1'g'11111111111111 11111. 151,143 14:111- 11111 1111111 r1'1'2llll. 11.1.1-.1111 X11-1--1 rvs 1-1--1- 1 ' 1111111 .1111111+1' l'1:1ss, 15131-1-2153 Yi111--1'1'11s1- 111'111 H1-111111' 1'1:1ss. 151215-53131 1', A, U.. .-.,.' 19.1.1-.111, 111111111 11111111 11111 311 XX sisimut 1'1l11111l' fvflllfflllllll-fl' N1z1g:1xi111-, 1-1 -w'. 1,1.11-.1-1, Nl! Y111 1' 11 'R ' H11 Q, ,. ,. -. . . 1 . .v-1 ...- 111'ts 1'1l111111' f'l111ll111,1111'l1' 111:35-2113: 4'11:1i1'111z111 111111 .-.. 1 11111:1111111s 11L'I11I11I1lIl1 1'111 311 5111 . 1, .,.-, 3. - 1 - 4.,-.,. 1111111 1 1111111-11, l,1.m-.111, 111111 gm ww' llf'l'l'l' 11'11,1 Illlllf 11111111 1'1'11f.11 gfrrwll 1'1'1111.v H1111 ll'rIN llllf 111,111 l1'11- IlI'l' 111111 1'r1111l111,v,w1'111111lv, 1936 ll: IIICIIFIXIC IHXIIIIIJIYICIIII I3HSWlJlI'l'II Il-I I'Il'illlIiIIIl Stn-vi. IDUIIVPII i'uIm':uIu I llIl'I'l'lI I+'-1II 15333-1' .Xri l'IuIv 151355-313' 4 v 2 1 .,.. M - ' ' , .,':-, 1 'lint lm wr YIIOEIIII: LUSH-255g SUQUIIII lIOImI In IcvtImII 'l'm-21111, 191353 First llulnl Iluc- Ixmx 'IX-21111. IHZI51 Svc-mul Gulll Iluclkvy 'IH-21111. 1935451 Mzlrslmll, 19345-336. 1' .wullf'xf'1Iflll .v11n,wl11fr1r'11n1l H10 I1 earl- fvll joy. QQ VLA 1936 Inf THE CHATHAMITE MAIIION I+II,IZAI'iIC'l'lI IIIIANVII Jia ,XIIIIIOITS TI. Me-xim. IJ. I . Iilltm-I1-sl I :1II. IEIIIIZ NIUIIIIIUI' I,Ill'IbIl 'I'v:1m1 UIQ-L' k'IulI. 121234: IIVEIIIIIIIIK 'S Gf4:3,0:vn.XLx dark! Qfxvgq, Nbfrn vg0 A Q-pb-Qld Nxvb avg-A k a'vxc -but WML YN, sau 'Ne No-wk og XM-'ack - . xkuim I -w -I-, I Al 1 qv.-, , .. -. , 1 , .If-I , l'luIv IIMI :lm Ihmc ilulv Vin Ib Ixlnllx I' 'z 1'm'In1', 1935-33131 .XSSISIIIIII I'IlIIIUl lllrlll ' ' ' mmilw IIIilQ'2lZIllt', ISISIS-21131 Xwisizllll IIITI-l'z11'-V I'I1Iitm' lvllllflllllllill' SIILII Iimml ' ' ' ' ' -z ' 1, 151.34m-.mgPrcslmlullt Intn-l'a1x'y I'irm'In-, 19235-SIU: IIUIIOI' IIUII. ISIZH-Sli' Ilmlm III I IIJII 's' C g 'sIl, 159134-5951 II1III4lI'SIIl I'Il'l'IIl'Il. ISHS-I-255, of Ulf' ,will N llff. f'Hf'Ffll1l1fUl'l'l' is fl l1l'l'llI'l.lIIIlI'fI'lHl'Ilf THE CHATHAMITE XL,-lglljs.. x0.L3u .L L.cfu.3. il 5 QLLI we 2.35 -op..-9 Ntfv'-I' 1A 1-WETLW 04515.-b 1k..A.L, ', .,.. -X -I..-,Q 41 ' K i F218 - luus .L :Lu '7' V I 11XN1'IiS 1'.XI31ZU1,I.l'11U'1'l'1 t'l1111I1:1:11. x'11'gL1II1'l 1'1Il1t'l'1't1 152111.1i1Z3'2gS1-11111141 1,l1I'1l14' S1111- 1-1-1' 'I'w1111. 151332-23331 First 1'l11'11l1- S111-1-1-1' '1'l'iIl1I. 151231-535: Yzlrsitlx' SlIf'l'1'I' T1111111 111232: Y:11'si1.1' S1N'l'l3I' 'l'v11111. 15123211 Sm'- 11111l I'111'11I11 11111-km' 'IR-11111. 121231: l i1's1' 1'l11'I111 11111-141-I1' '1'l'?l1l1. 1E1Z3I3, 111235-2313' Y:11's111' 1111 1'.1' Y1'l'2I111. 1512323. 111235-2313 ll, S1-1-111111 1'll1'1l1l' 1311x141-1111111 '1'l'2l1ll. 1111323 I uf d 231: 1 i1s1 l,ll1'll1l' I311s11l1:111 '1'11:1111. 111531 -VM' 135: Y2l1'S11.V 1'3:1s11l1z1l1 'l'11:1111. 1512353 Y ' ! 1' l'1':11-k 11111111111'-l 11, 1f123Z3g'11'111'k'l111 alfa , -MW 1-1,-11. 111231. LAI Ulillllj illlf Hn' 1111111 H ll . a, 0.4, -1-1 ' ' J I X QC., J f' ,cub - GA-v Nj! 13311, ZW' J SIHY11 l3.X111JW1N i'U.X'I'l'IS 227 XYi1111111111'1'1- .-Xvv.. XY11y1111. l'1-11l1sy11':111i1 1'1ll11'I'l'41 191111.151231181-w11111 1,1I1'll1l' Sm'- wl' '1'v11111, 111331 1 S111111111 1,lll'Il1l' 11111'1i11.1' Vlwlxillll, 111231-23131 First 1,1ll'l11K' SUl'1'l'l' 'l'1-11111, 151235: .XS11'4lllUlllj' l411l11. 19535- 53131 .Xrf 911111. 151333-21131 11211100 111l11I. 1935-2341. 'fluff 1177 l71r1l'.w lffwl of flfzrh' IIIIIZ llfllffllf jIll'f'1l fn 71r'1' flxffrwf Huff hm' r'A11P.v. X X! Z K AIA-ll 4.11. -1 'l kg! yu- fa! J SX J 'ZJ,5,,,,,,!...,!fM.4.,..f'7qLU1z 1936 fd-...7'f1 --f4J-.V .7,,,,,., !M,,-Ml 4-Ll aw!! J, ,YJ7 has-f . X-l.,.,,LsA! I IiA'l'lIAliINl41 1lUN'l'lNG'l'ON DAY H4 Iiust Nllll'tl1'lll Str:-vt, Nm-w York City l'l1111-xml Full,15932g Svvoml Purple Hoc- lwy 'IR-11111. 192331 First Purple- Succcr 'l'mu11. 1Sl335g lJra111ut,ic Club, 1934-363 Ulm- llllllb. 19533-256: Choir, 1935-36: llilling Club, 1112325-Zllig Lita-x'z1.1'y Uirclu, IEIIZB-336: llmm- Ululm. l935g GFUIIID Lvzulm-r. 19535-35151 'l'roz1s11x'e1' Svniur Vluss, 12335-Iilig Yico-Plvsimlclxt Sturlent Uuumcil, 15335-Dilig First Lady of May i'ol1rT,19336. ll ffl.11I11f'.w.w body and fl blflflzelfzsx IlIl'lllI.n 1936 llllll' 't'l'2ll'.Y l7i1'c'l4-, 1935-23111 llmlm' Noll, lAll THE CHATHAMITE Il ICLE N Y IRG I Nl .X DUK IC llc-nry. xlilfillilll l'uunty. Illinois vu-ml Full. 193353 Mvlnlmr Hold V-ll'2llll1 llfilllliltli' .xSSOClilTl0ll. 19235-2363 'llC111lNJl'i1l'y Student Voum-il, H1352 Uhoir, 151:35-:mg Glu- Vlulr. 19:45-:sus 19235-36. Ning again will: ylflll' rlwn' nniw' r1'1'1'r1f- ing .1 im 10 of 801118 ll'0l'ftl far rum, OIlI'S.H -v I 0 46-Pd 1 'MT K, u'X 'f-wnx -1 I - J-X 5 Lgnfxlg - .JL , A .f 4 Ll'--1 M M., A oo ' cf fVVf5 -,,c W -f I A fy' . idyllic 3 Zfffnffad' fl. I 1 I' ' I Y xt -f N -2 I V If I gf I N x! X ' f K X XX x' I, f x l 5 X xxkx HE G5-IAT, MITE ,bmi U fl IQ V ' xg .2 ff gd 1 I U f fy K: ' 5 D M! 'xx rl' B .XXX WI IIIII'IIJK.f I Id vnu-. Q vtifqlt rv J 1 1 I . J X. C 1 rf! f rf' J 'I 1 if V1 XIIIII I YI X IHXIIII 248 Nlillmrn N111-1-1. Ilmlu-sim-V. Now York w Itl1Ic'1'wI I zlII, I'IH N14 -.I 1 ' 1 -MINI IInIfI IIN-- wy IIIUEIIII Iflnf. III-I-T1 I'lI'SI MMIII Ilw- - ivy IIIUZIIII, ISIZIIQ S1-vm11I lIuI1I SUK'I'l'I' w If h 1 ., , . 1 . -1. -1-x ,-N,--., I'l1'sI 1.11111 II:1s'- 2 .V . , ., 4 , . - . yy ..y.,- In tim III lc-um, ISM.,-mm, IEIIIIJIIII VMI X'll IIX VMI I 1 -3': firsf .u 1 ' MUIII Rasa-Ia1II 'IH-zum. ITMJ. lillltillll. IIIJJXIIIIX lII14u1l Xl III11 A,- Y ...S .,.' ' Q :E . , 1 1 -1-x vb IIIIIIHIIH' llulm l'r1-W. 192335-ISIS III'z1m:1tlc lIllIl Nt 111 IxI2lII2lLfUI', IEIISS- .,-,vw rin 4 , ...-. nlw In hlllll lmlnl In IIII l'I'53 'iii' Iiu imx Iwlltm llmfll :milf XIII I' ml 5 H H .,- I .x , -f f ' 'ern Q, lflfwm wfi IIIK'IIIIIlIl'?Il'.Y SIIIIIUIII .r ' .,. IUIIIH II, ISMII. ll1'g'1'f111fiw,v nw, fflfllfj-V lflfrl Nflflll' Irfan! lllf'II ll 'Y' 'I ,Zi 1, -' I SHl'Cl'l' .I 1 z 2' .' H lIoI4 514113- U -1- ,I I ' A 1 I -u r , - - - 1 1 , . - Q - HIM' l'IuIm, 533333-33453 c4Il0II', 12135- - ' 1' - - +'... , , ,. -, . , . , 'zsltiuns Ifhlitm 17111 IIIIIII-fl' XYOEII' IIIUQJIIPIIS-I5 ., .,N,,,'1' 'IINIIII lllf' rvrrrl, 1111! pn ,wfun fx Hu' I5 gulf. 1936 X11l1'lC lCl.,lZ.XI3l'I'l'1l l1'ICI1'I'S 11:1l11x. 111211111 lll11'l'111l 191111, 1113541 1111-v 1'l11l1, 11121-1- 1 ' .1 .1 - 1 . 111 11111113 151.11--1111 BIIISI1' 111111, 151.11- 171 Mz11'sl11111. 111135-2111:.Xs11'111111111y 1'l11l1. 151515-2113. I'I11'l' fx H111 jI1'l'!'1'1ll'Sl !If'I'1l,fl f1j'j11.11, 1936 THE CHATHAMITE V 1 l'.11l111I11111XN'1' -5111111 ' , . ' C119 11111. ll11lz11l1-11111111 l'111111svlx'z1111:1 11. 1 ' 5111111- l1111'1'1-11 F1111 1 1'3' 'l'1'1'-1 11111 11111111'1' 1'l11ss. 1515131-311g 'l'1'1111is Singh-s, 1'111-3151 T11111- l11l11111'l' 1111. 121315- 's1 1111111 ll111'lil'.Y 'l'1'11l1l, 15131-215- X 11 111 11111111-'1' 'l'l'2lll1, 111I15g 13111111111 1 1 1 . .. w- l.,.1 111' 'l'11111 1!1,111, 11151 1111111 S111'1'1'l' 'l'11:1111 111111 X 'Q .,. vzirsiij' 5111'- 111 Vlwlklllll. 1'1111' lJl'2lIllil1l1' ftlllll, 11111-1 11: .Xs11'111111111-1' 1'l1111, 151215-21111 '1'1-111- 11111'111'1' 5111111111 1 1111111111 1'1'33'1' X C , ,- . ...1. 1111-1-2151 l,1'11S11l1ll1 1 X 11, 111235-2111- .,- l111li111f 1111111 1112121-21111M111'1'11111'L,l51.1b 5 In llllflll H1111 111l1'1' 1111 l'I'llt'II lljllff K 1 15 1' X Gb Lal U, '+ELkI11'Xj1 1' 1 ' 11 1 ' BWV 2 .kfpil -fd ww 11115 1 . 51 11511 NU m ,- 1 kllxwaa Q- -- 1- 11211 . 1l1'r111'.v. r 1 x4.N ' ' 'i -- ,- N 3' l X1 R-Q '11 .La .. XN L K A-1. , x X IK1 jx my -L 41 ik fx ' I ' ' T1 1 ? 4 '11 11 K X L .JI NJHA NX1 1 'A ,x.L1'., ,A V N 'Q 4 lx 'll i 1 x 11 ', '15 N 1- Is.-5 ,. 1 -,' X ' , .- x' Z rf VJ J . U THE CHATHAMITE fs., 4 , 1: ' ' 4 1 .' X dr uv 6, 'AL s Xfk-I '1-3. x I , , , ,, , . , V ' 'N. N- LQI Ihli XXX I l'.IUI.XX IlIulIHll'lx J if -.1 ' fxff linllslml Spa. X4-W Yurk ,N N J x 1 -tg K 'X l':llft'l'l'4l Full. HHH: l'xil'Si H0141 S4w4'G1' 9, - A 4w1111, 19.3415 4411141 M4414 N44 gy QQYIHKSL S4-4'4rll4l Holml IIlll'lif'y 'l'U2llll,19:JJ , 5' Villltilill S4-44441141 1244141 Bzlsvlmll 'l'4-:lm xgh 15135: Vu vtzlin Sl'l'Ull4l Hulnl S444-vol' N . ' Q 'l'l'2llll. IJZSUQ Imlllllwr-11p Hull' Iuur- , , ll2lllll'lli. 192553 lilw- Vluh, 19:14-2351 ' I7l'2llllilfil' Vlulm IEPIH-35' .Xsfr X' ' I 4 - . .4 4 1 f 1 'V A V 'ffyxl l lub, 154230-iilwg C . .X. K .. 113311: 5TUllCllt N19 4 ' X 'l'44llll4'il. IUISS-33451 May i'ou1'f, 19236, S' I U I Af'Q'4fl744'14yf 4'4n4 bw lruljf grwlf ll'7ll.Cfl 'ix ' A ' A Wm! l'I,f1llf.H X, . M1 xr ,I n A I- x,5 fb V .'r' ,, x , 1 I . , 4 .IANI-YI' WICI7lPl+Il1l3lTlIN G'HI'Ilil ' Iinx N. XXlnn4-1k:4. Hlllllbls I 1114-1144! Full. 19,331 H4'l11lm4-1' Plllpll I4 lllll H4npl14ml4rr41 lisszly M4-4lz1l. l'l1l I 4 ., ., - 1 IM 1111111144 llulu. 1.1.14-nh: Ulm- llulr .,. ' .1-.,. - IU:-I-,vial K'Il4rl1'. Ifhm-41111 H1111 VIU11 l'l 45-:Mig Art Vlulm. 131153-SSH: l,it4111H 1 ll'4'l4'. l'J'33 'Hi' HVUIIID ll l1lUl' l'ln , . 4 44,-1 , Af , . 1. , ,4 . .-.. - w - u v , lu., 4 lv IAIIIHI'-Ill-fIIIL'l f!44rll444m4lr' HIP 4 10,1 141 lllullx lllltlil illill -, ...-. N , , , fvflllfflllllll-fl' Ywll' lluuk. 11935-1313 r4!4 1.4 H144 lurlrml .v lmfml, 4l'f14'1'r' ll lr! Vlllllll. lllx jlrxl. 114241 4'411ll4l1'.lf 4'1'4'1' fx 41l ll 41 1936 l'ii,.vW,,. ,,fh,,,- if-4 'W'- X f 4 K ,ff-. ' 1 N ' Q4 AX '1 x ' 7 -' ,Z-. W , N ' V L , x,-:., , , 'QS' ,V 1-4 -x - 91 1'- , U ...I ', N THE CHATHAMITE ,. Ak f GFX' , W 4, x 9 Y ISICTSY IIANIMUXIJ llHl l l'IlI A IJm1g'lzlsvillv. I,l'lllISylYillliZl ' L, vrml Full. ISIZHZ film- Vlulw, ISPCH- wr .xSIl'Hll0lll'X' Vlula, 19555-3151 Music Q luln. IEDSS5-39433 50101111 l'llr'plv Iizlsvlmll lm 1111. 19325: First l'u1'pIv Sow-vi' 'l'm-:un 10,51 First l,lll'IPIO llm-lwy 'l'vzlm I935-Ciii, lf: why Nflilllllf liff' all lfllnnll' lr1', ' ILXIIISAXILX l IH'II'IliUlIN IlUY'l' f'U1Tl?L'l'SillXYlI. Xvw Yurk I':llIl'l'l'll Full, 19231181-mlnl ihnlal Sm-vm-1' 'l'vz1ll1, IEPIH-235: First Gwlrl llalskm-tlmll VFUEIIII. 117352 lfirsl llulnl ll:1sl'lr:1ll'l'x':lll1. ISHS: First Hulll llovli4'lx' VVUEIIII, 1532351 Y:ll'sii.x' Iluvks-y 'l'v:1l11. 192351 Svmnul Hull! Ilmlkvy 'I'1-um. 19230: Musir- Vlulv. 111251-C551 Sl'l'I'K'I21l'.Y1lllll,l'l'1'ilSIll'l'l' Nlusiv Vlulu, 121255-IHS: Killing Ululm. 15325151 I'1'm-simlvnt .XStl'Ull0lllf' Vlulv. 19255-IHS. Tim l1II'I'!-If ,H'I'l'l'l'N nluufffwfl nn um' .wl1'n1. XX-P'lJ-XA Ag,Y',.yy1xl-Ax ' xxx.: VJA-Q 3 flxlik xfvx -X xl 17 f C 9 3 6 L x f '1 1' K.Lq,Xy fxpf Mwiwl A-A, kk LW 1 Xiang ,'-3 'QL pf ,x kt ' ,Q ,4-1,-.N lk! 1, L 1 4,x.1.11, L, f A ' wx be p' F A 1 1 I ' J X' 't I' I K , Al.. V- NU i , ,V sf 'V 'Q L P' ns V I. V' ,Pun .J I ,FL nv, Dm! 5 Y ' If X U ' LL: 1 V4 5 1 THE CHATHAMITE ff' '1'-'VU-f'1f 1, '1 lIz'A 'N ul -vp V Krzg ,sf My o I J x IIICLICX ST Il1I,lIY NIXIZ Nllfl' ' 1 N2 .a 'u IInI1f.1x. Xu, 1 1 X 1 4 M I' Ui NIIALL :ul 14111, 111.1-m:.Xl'1 111111 1E1.5,w 111, 4XS1l'11l10lIly Club, 111:15-1115: 501171111 lu plv Slll'1'1'l' '1'L'2ll11, 1513153 S1-1-111111 l,ll1'PI1' llon-lim' Vlvlvllll 111511 'Al ll'0I'L'lIl1llI ffm! nrww flN!l1llllI'li.H lrfll nn! in be V .IICAN MYERS ll11Y'l' l'm1lwl's14m'll. NPN' York I':ll1Q1'l'1'1I Fall. 111334: First 1111111 11111-lu-y 'l'vz1n1, 1112355 Svmnlnl 110111 linsmxlvalll 'l'1'2lll1, 1!1ZS5g First 1111111 Huskm-Hmll 'IK-elm, 1512353 Sc-1101111 1111111 Ilmlu-lx' 'l'1-mn. 11121131 S1l1'12lI SO1'l'1'f2ll'y Ari ttllllly 151335-23151 AS11'1lll11l11j' 1'lulm, 121:35-:11ig ,I1,i1li11g 1'lu11, 111313. 'l'llr'y .wry lI'l' Ill'I' 1111110.91 IIN lihflfdk 1'gg.s. . ' -f '1 . , ,J 1 1 ' .f 1 1 r 1' i 1 ., . VA -' f .I , I2 V I I Iv 1 V .1 -, f L' V ' V., L, f ' lf' ' .. K YJ' 1 1' J r P ' v V 1 1936 zTv1 f l nlfll vw f if' an x I M21 .k ,Af Q .l , .. l Q mckffm ' MM 49' lb' F V1 I ' 1 5 pQ,in Al kung, 1 xx., . k Lkag k,kk '-KTAD, LkNl1kb'l , THE CHATHAMITE x I R x N ' lk ,X- 'x 1 -N ' g 1 KK 'N - an ,Mas ,Gull W k' F ,gt f alll' nf! J uf 4 lr C 1'4 fvdffl 4 j ul LL ,v ILL Vlvnflrvlf f 'Lx N l iw YAXVY lll'fNXlX1lll4Ul Mlillill lIlll'l'l'1l Full, lfllilg IJ1'z1111z1ti1- Vluln, .llllIl'N lifw fx lull Il jfwl, l flrwrmf, 11 Nlllllllllf. lmI1l1!1',ul1', ll Uflllill' A GL 4. A .. . , n 502 l':u'k .'xYL'IIlII'. X1-w York Viiy HMI My lllillly lluln l'ln yu, rl! Iliff lwxl. lll l'll MANY l'l'IXl llCl,ll 42302 Mmxtrusv AYl'llllt'. NlUlllI'l'2ll l'.. lfumuln l lltllul l ull lllnl1S1'1'Ullll llulml llw- lwx' 'IR-nm, 193451 Sl'l'HIlll Hulml flUl'l'l'l' Wal mm llHllllI'2lI'Y M4-lnlwl' Nlusiv lwml 1 lull, l.l.,.1-.mg .Xstl'u11ml1x' ilulm. l flllll St'l'I'l'l2ll'.Ylll4'1' lllllll, lilllfu-illig Swv- . .wwlzllv l'.1llI4rl'I Illllllllllllll' N 4'-11' llmuk 1 C ull-nt Vmxlwil 1013 'ili- I fnllnu' up Ihr' Illllkvf llrwldff' of lluy mul Xiyjlfl. mul llwrill mul llrfllf' lil 1936 I THE CHATHAMITE - ykc. 1 'SN .,7c,1'k' 1 174A x 111,-4 I i11 '1p 1 1 v 4 ' '- V X I l buh l,1,,C 1 :Q Pb 1 ' w f P 1' Ki 1 1 .dp .. km- ' F' 71 liflfb-, 7 1 M 5 1. 114-1' K 1 t 1 W ,XJ , , -1 BV! ' 1 X A L I K, . 1 xNw 1 C' J ,N X Q I fs ' X Us v -0 I VY Y 1 - 4 1 4 1 ' 1 - 4 rw J vx1'11l 111zX11u 1 1,1'.11'.11.XN11 5111111 fy Y Sl 11l'1'11Ell'l1 .xV1'1llIl'. 1'1'111'i111-11111-. 1111111111 151211111 .1 L N 1411111'1'1'11 131111, 11131311 51111111111 1111111 S1111- fl L5 1'111' '1'1-11111, 15121311 '1'1'111 1111'111'1' 5111111-111 'P . . . 1 . - .Q Q t11111111'11, 10:1-11 11111-1'111'.1' 111'1111', 111.141- r 211i1111'111111 111':111111'. 111:11-11111 111s11'1'ss 111' , 1'11s1111111-S 111':111111f114 1Xss111-i111i1111. 111:15- i111: 1111111141 1'1l111. 15151111 111111111' 111111. 121:11-31111.Xss1st:111111111-1'111'yl114l11111-f'!111- l!14r1111'l1' Y1'2l1' 11111l1i.111:11-11511'1111111I'-111- 111111-I' 1'!141l!1411111'l1' NYUZII' 1111411i, 151.111-1111. -1' -1 4 U7vfl1'I'l N 111111111141 Nl mm rllrwll in 1111111 II !1'111pI1'. H 1 , 1' 8.111.111 11111'I11'S'1'I 11 HAI' XL 111 . 1 S111-1111111 .'x1'l'l'S. 11x1'111'11. N1-w x.1!l'k 1 1 .,.y 4 111 1 111 11111 5111111111 1111111 11111 111-lx' '1'1'!11l1, 121211: S1-1-111111 1111111 112151111111 '1'11z1111, 1512153 S1-1111111 1111111 11z1sk11t11111 1u111,c1'1 'a . .1- .. .'.' 111' 1 .,- ., 1l'2llll, 151.1:11.Xs11'1111111111 1 11111 19.1.1-.111 1 7 111411111111 111111. 1E1.1.1-11111 1,111-1'111'1' 1'11 .,.. ., . .,- ., . 1-11-, 121-141-.1111 M111's11111l. 15111-1-.111 A I .yr-1.. 1 A11 1. 4---1 . ' g 111111111 Q1ll11L' 1111111 11171 111 '1111111111.11'1 1 1'1111111'i1. 15151111 Sports 1'1l11111l' 11111111111 ' v 11113 '111 nnlr' 1 11111' 11111111 1111 1.1 Ihr' wr!! 111 11111 ll'1'l'N1l fI.1lll.U 1936 fl! JLJVVIA ' , f 'fill' ' Jw ff THE CHATHAMITE of l 1 L UELEY WIUKHAM TAYLOR Nilllkillg, China lilltvwml Full, 19355 Assistant lfhlsinoss llliillilglll' fllllbllllllllilll Your Book, 1935- 36: S0i'l'Ul2lI'.Y mul lllI'PZlSl1l'Cl' Dramatim' Ululm. 19255-365 Literary Circle, 1935- 2363 liirml l lulm, 19363 Honor Roll, 1935- 36: Stumluut Council, 1936. 1,m1'w 71 wr lo 11 moan Alllfl lo lllosa lhorns thu! in hw' bosom loflgf' To prirlf and sling Ivor. ICIJIINA lll'll5lCl'l'.X TILDEX Winlvr llzlwn, l+'lurirl:l l':lll't'l'Ull Fall, 1923233 First llolcl liaiso- li , .IV-Tig 'z uatic- Club, ' s1:5:s-:scig Glo- Ululm, . s I'llll0lll.Y Ululx, 1935-36g I lAilvl':xl'.v l'irvl0, 19235-25131 lrvsillcul' Iyfllllfc Vlulw, 15135-5361 Group Loamlcng 19235-IHS: llll2llI'1lHlll World Uullook D0p2ll'lll1L'lll. 19235-313. llYlIl'Il you :lo rlfznlrv, I lrixll your I uvrrf of H10 sm, llml you nziglzf ww' :lo .Vollling lnzl fl111l. ' Mfizc, a- l936 HJ -tad-c,Lq,xf-C W THE CHATHAMITE fl D NIXHY 'I' .TICS Y.Xlfllll.'XN J lzllzlx. X ll'glllll2I Jw 'A ' 42 , .-1, , , . JMU, sr:z5-:so. ' D our flI'll!'l'N f!f'Nl.l'4' 1' lI'l'Hl .lf1Ill.U 11 flu'-T -Kcauw - x. -. ... JG..Xg,Q ,gg QQWQ gal X X :iq--3 L. K- J-M xfk 'N-f-11.4 -V v x V 1 rx 1---b A-X fv Q-1 4, 1- .': :Linux -rx X141 1'AlIlIHl.l, VAX .XI,S'l'YNI'I - W 4N,.A,, V. Hlltm-11-ml Ifnll, 193311 AIt'llllN'l' Hulfl 'Fm-:Img Ul'ZlIllilIii' Vlulv. lfiiil-IHS. l'l11'.w' lilllr' Hlllllffx fm' yrrwrl lu lilllr' umm. I 6 ,. W' 22- 1936 ,M THE CHATHAMITE W . 1- ' 'X .. , I a 17 b .1 ' r ' . X ' ' C LA ' 9 MARY KKXHY wll,l,n'uX Q Nlvzuluwl11'mnlu-. Nurfulli. X'il',LLilli2l A 'x 1,2 '7: - v. 2 ' . 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Nl: 1' IIVIN Il n11'.wl1'r',w.w of hw' url. 1936 Q li , t lffl 4.1, Ji . 1 I l Lggf - 1 4 - N S N 3 I . v..- , 'L THE CHATHAMITE SENIOR CLASS WILL E, the Class of '36, being only partially dressed, due to the recent craze for sun-bathing, and i11 ai low frame of mind, due to our imminent departure from this, our most rece11t earthly dwelling place, do hereby make our most solemn will and testament, desiring that our general Senior privileges be given to the oncoming Ju11iors, and that the following personal bequests be effected: Biddle Bettle, setting a last alarm clock under the study-hall floor, and reg1'et- fully lighting a last firecracker, leaves her Chatham Hall Past to Betty Zabriskie. Clay, although dashing on her way to a dozen engagements, pauses long enough to bestow some of her efficiency o11 Woodle. She can spare it! Pud, swaying from side to side, leaves her supple walk to Kassie Nimick. Ely, with a prolonged shriek, wills her te1nperam.ent-not her hair-to Flo Wardwell. Helen Marshall hands over her figure to Mary Jane Hart. Hew to the line, Mary Jane, let the pounds fall where they may! The Hoyts, trying to tell each other apart, give their independence of ezieh other to the Osborns. Betsy Hoffer, eraning, leaves her turtle neck to Peggy Ward. Here's to more neck-action, Peggy! Booty thankfully leaves her hip-bones to front Pruden-it always has needed a hat-rack--while Parge, with a sigh for her months of wasted effort, gives her tall to Pitney. Frances Vaughan hands over her rogues' gallery to the younger sister. Let's keep it in the family, Margaret! Ruth Mary, after rising from the depths just in time for a dance practice, leaves her ability to concentrate to Mary Mcl'lean MeKissick. Bunny leaves her faith i11 human nature to the school in general. It can use itl Betsy Felts, in pantomime, bestows her volubility on P. K. Andy gives her stature to Sarah Choate. Alice i11 Wonderland did it, Sarah! Gina hands over her red shirt to the purple team. It's such a lovely combination l Helene, in a noble attempt to change Haavad to Harvurd, bequeathes her Denver drawl to Grinnell. M'Apple leaves her neatness to Tuttle and Vale. But eve11 that seems an under- quota! 'Mi11a, skipping Orion-like, leaves her fairy feet to Elizabeth Stokes. Sadie joyfully hands over her teeth to Dykie-to help fill the aching void. Mary Cary wills her maouse, poor little thing, to Pruden-as if it didn't have enough already l Helen Taylor leaves her happy memories of China to Dr. Lee to supplement his list of after-lecture stories. Branch, cyasting a last regretful look in the mirror, decides that it's all for the best, and gives her hair to Baby Mitchell. 24 1936 THE CHATHAMITE Dukie, orb as the case may be, Nanki Poo, wills her voice to Ginny Downing. From monotone to Met! Janet Gregory, renouncing the lighter things of life with unnecessary emphasis, bequeaths her frivolity to Marion Cowles. Itis a gift, Marion! Bentley Booth, tossing her pretty bobbed head, resigns her yodel to Nancy Waters. But children should be seen and not heard! Weezie gives her blase acceptance of life i11 general to Jean Crispell. Let's see a little less enthusiasm, Jean! Sibyl graciously wills her vitality to Hollister. Come on, Hollister, pep up! Trishie, unable to repress an excited squeal at the last, leaves it to Frances Munson. Kay Day, after raising her eyebrows carefully and finding that it's no use, hands them over to Rosie Stephenson. Now we can see them, Rosie! Nanny Meier leaves her heavenly music to the Devotional Department. Harp! Harp! the larp! No witnesses were available, for this, our will, but if there are no additions or corrections, we will consider it approved in the eyes of posterity. CLASS PROPHECY Dear Dr. Lee, Thank you very much for the charming Christmas card you and Mrs. Lee sent me. I thought you might be interested to know of an amazing experience which occurred to me the other day. Imagine finding all of the Class of '36 in one place at one time and not all talking at once! At the Metropolitan Opera House the other day I was attending a matinee per- formance of i'armen,,' in which our most noted alumna, Helen Duke, sang the title role. She sang gloriously, but the girls were so excited at seeing each other again that poor Helen had a strong element with which to compete. A The iirst person who caught my eye was Mary Cary Willcox, entirely surrounded by a bevy of small Spanish urchins who compose one of her numerous Sunday school classes. Across the aisle to the left sat Prudence Smith with her rival class. In the row ahead was Mary Bentley Booth-she was wearing her tweeds. As you know, she is the champion hog-caller of Texas, having put her yodling to good effect. At an exciting moment in the second act, greatly stirred by Helen's melodious warbling, Mary Bentley emitted a yodel of great volume. Unfortunately, this created among the children of the two classes a serious disturbance, which was only quelled when a very neatly dressed young lady, whom I immediately recognized as our own Mary Applegate, stepped forward with a serene countenance and said, My children, be still l and they were. During the i11termission, as I made my way into the aisle, I stumbled over a t1'61ll8I1dOl1S obst1'uction. Looking up, I saw a young woman whom I recognized as Clara Applegate and realized that the idol of the Women's Clubs of Morristown had the well-remembered feet of Clay. Accompanying her was Helene Bosworth, who 25 1936 THE CHATHAMITE had come east as a representative of the Prairie Mothers, Association of Denver to coni-er with Clara. We walked up the aisle together, and i11 the lobby we ran into Kay Day, the beloved author of those influential books, Priscilla and Pauline at Boarding School or Wild Life in the Dormitoriesf' Our attention was attracted to a very mannishly dressed woman smoking a cigarette in a long holder, none other than Anne Ely. Suddenly the blase expression left her face, and seizing a. pencil, she began to scribble frantically on her cuff. Upon inquiry, we ascertained that she had just worked out a formula for a new highball. . Upon going back to my seat, I was almost enmeshed in what proved to be Bunny Kneeland's chewing gum. Bunny had fulfilled her ambition to be a social service worker and was now making her latest protege feel at home by chewing gum at the opera. Shadowing Bunny I saw the meticulous Mary Applegate picking up the gum papers as Bunny let them fall. I turned to avoid a fresh onslaught of chewing gum and saw in a box the noted coiffeuse, former Booty Woods, who is now married, as you know, to the illustrious beauty expert, Vorticelli of the Spitz. His jet black ringlets had been freshly curled that very morning by the devoted Booty. As I thumbed through my program, I came upon the picture of a coming attrac- tion of the skating season, Little Andy of the Silver Skates. On the next page was an iidggrtisement of the Waistcoat Tailleur. You will be delighted to hear that Mrs. Waistcoat is the erstwhile Sibyl Coates. The Waistcoat Tailleur has become well known through the clothes designed by Margaret Woods. Up to this time Parge's talent had been eclipsed by that of her twin. But There is no point in hiding your light under a bushel, says Parge, and she is 11ow the exclusive designer for the Hoyt twins. These two noted models were seated in a box displaying gowns for the cocktail hour. When the lights were bei11g dimmed, and the orchestra started tuning up for the third act, I noticed a familiar face beaming from the orchestra pit, and the figure of Nancy Meier twined gracefully around her harp. Now and then a wistful look came over Na.ncy's face, and strains of The Volga Boatmanv floated forth. The lights Went down, and at the appearance of the toreador, I noticed a lovely woman ahead of me let down her hair and weep. I realized it was Betty Branch des Gonzales, bewailing the absence of her husband detained in Mexico during the bullfighting season. At this moment I heard a commotion in the balcony, a11d turned around to see Gina Farr, wife of the famous Frank Duck, the big game hunter, accompanied by a pet gorilla, Keatsey. They were both wearing bow ties, and Gina was vainly attempt- ing to appease Keatsey's commotion with animal crackers. As my gaze traveled from balcony to box, I noticed a stealthy figure snooping around. It was none other than Mrs. Rapaljeis little goil Sarah, the Walter Winchell of her day. The box behind which she stood contained the well-known Rotogravure belle, Trishie Grant, who had landed her millionaire and now appeared decked in 26 1936 THE CHATHAMITE sables and orchids. Beside her sat Miss Albany, the bathing-beauty queen, but I penetrated her disguise and recognized Louise Herrick, who was sharing Try1ie's box for the purpose of publicity. Suddenly Trishieis familiar giggle rang out as Janet Gregory, that arch anarchist, stood up to hurl a bomb at Carmen -poor Dukiel Janet had been foiled in an attempt the day before to harangue the rabble from a soap box, and had come to the Opera to wreak vengeance. However, remem- bering that she had never been able throw straight, even in baseball, she broke down, and was led weeping from the scene. What will Sarah's column tell tomorrow? The performance was over and I arose to leave, but my progress up the aisle was retarded by the waltzing figure of Elmina Tilden, who has turned Bohemian and was wearing dangling earrings Hlld a beret. She was putting into practice a new dance step which the opera had suggested to her. In the emptying theatre, I was surprised to see Ruth Mary Penfield sitting alone, apparently in deep thought. I touched her on the shoulder, and with a start she said, Could you tell me when this performance begins ?', An explanation was needed, and she hastened to tell me that she had been concentrating on Helen Taylor, who was then engaged in cleaning up Chinatown, as it was the nearest she could get to home. Going out into the lobby, I noticed that all the gentlemen were wearing hats which did not fit. This was due, I discovered, to the sweet, slow, Southern smile of the hat-check girl, Helen Marshall. Francis Vaughan was chatting with her, and I learned that she had come north to answer to the great demand of New York's debutantes to learn the Southern shag. She informed me that Betsy Felts was about to marry an Arctic explorer and that Frances Crute had finally married her Hargrave love, and was now making men, not moneyf' Just then, a frantic figure rushed past me. lt was Biddle-bettle, who had been going to a board meeting and could not figure out how in the world she got to the opera. Being a successful psychiatrist, she was sure the reason lay in her sub- conscious mind. I was thrilled to have seen the class which I had sponsored in '36, but suddenly realized there was one person missing. The, cry of Cigarettesl reached my ears, and turning around I beheld Betsy Hoifer balancing a tray of cigarettes and flashing a smile at prospective customers. Knowing that you will be pleased to hear of the Class ot' '36, I send this on to you for what it is Worth and hope that you will derive great pleasure from reading it aloud in assembly. Faithfully yours, agleomalla fAgent of The Eyes and Ears of the World! 27 I 9 3 6 THE CHATHAMITE WHAT WOULD HAPPEN- If Woodle were ever dressed for chapel? If all third Dabney ever got to breakfast on time? If the Vaughans didn't get any mail? If we picked only violets in the gyardin? If Gina wore ruffles? If the faculty paid attention in assembly? If Judy Fisher found her Tinker ? If all third Pruden got a tub? If Clay lost her voice? If Eleanor Herrick got the bird? or vice versa? If Caroline Boxley really saw a vampire? If Branch learned to face a mouse? If Edith Cowles developed reserve? If Betsy Hoffer said Y-E-S? If Viggi walked like Winlock? If Dizzy spoke the King,s English? If Dykie were ever at a loss? If Ruth Frick stinted the Service League? If Gloria's hair turned Green? If Trout had a hook nose? If somebody imitated Kitty King? If Evelyn Byrd joined the army? If Kitty Hobson had a stiff neck? If Hollister arched her feet? If Motley tarnished? If there were only one Osborn? If Maisie were an idealist? If they didn't sell Wooley's in the book store? 28 1936 THE CHATHAMITE SENIOR ELECTIONS Who has done most for Chatham ....................,v.................... Who has done most for the class ...,..... Most popular with students .........,. Most popular with teachers ....... Bralnlest .........................,........ Best athlete .......................... Best looking ......... Cutest ............,...... Best dressed ........ Most lady-like ......... Prettiest hair ......... Best figure .........,. Neatest ............. Most poised ........ Most comical .......... Worst punster ...,.... Most optimistic .......... Most pessimistic ....... Most happy-go-lucky ........ Most original ................. Most versatile ............ Wittiest ............... Most startling ........ Most interesting ....... Most generous ......... Most tactful ..,........ .......Eclith Kneeland .......Margaret Woods ........l4ldith Kneeland ........Betty Branch ........Betty Branch ..........Virginia Farr . ...... Mary Applegate ..,.,..Mary Dary Willcox .........Patricia Grant .......Prudcnce Smith .......Mary Applegate ...i..........Sihyl Coates ......Mary Applegate ,.......Katharine Day .................Virginia Farr Mary Bentley Booth ..........Sarah Rapalje Ely ........Virginia Farr ..........Frances Bettie .......Edith Kneeland .........Sarah Rapalje ..........Frances Bettle . ..,...................................... Frances Bettie Helen Taylor and Patricia Grant .......Edith Kneeland Most thoughtful .,....., .................................... H elen Taylor Best sport ............ ........... X Virginia Farr Pluckiest ................. Most unseliish ......... Most ambitious ......... Biggest loafer ........,....... Most conscientious .,...... Strongest will ............. Most stubborn ........ Most energetic .......... Quickest thinker ............... .........Franccs Clrute ......,.l-lelen Taylor .........Elmina Tilclen ...........Nancy Meirer .......Clara Applegate .Ruth Mary Penfield ....................Ann Ely . ......................................... Clara Applegate .......Betty Branch and Most argulnezitative ......... ............ F rances Bettl Most sophisticated ........ .....................,......... Most widely read ........ ........................ Best singer .......... Best actress ................ Best dancer ............... First to get married ......... 1936 Ruth Mary Penfield e and Janet Gregory ....,....Katharine Day ............Betty Branch ..............Helen Duke ........Edith Kneeland .........Elmina Tilden .................Ann Ely THE CHATHAMITE TH I NGS Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Mrs. Miss Mrs. Mrs. Miss Miss Mrs. Miss Miss Mrs. Mrs. Miss Miss Mrs. Miss Mith WE COULD NOT DO WITHOUT Schmid's happy hymns Asgaard's drooping digits H0llgIll31I'S dynamic dramatics J01l6S,S turbulent tearoom Loveland's international interests Hensleigliis laughter at life Holt's vindication of Virginia vocabulary Montague's germinating geniuses Balclwnils room-order rhymes Cousins's majestic mien Miller's Mikado Felts's succulent suppers Waruock's amiable attitude Hanna,s aromatic animal Stewa1't,s ghastly golf Herndon's lily-white laundry Andrusls classical concerts A. Marsha.ll's astronomical aspirations , 'Xp 1 Q Poague's beloved boots Q gpm-'rfb 9 nfpsfrfv., W'll' 'M 11M '4f 'iy+ 9k' ,.-Ax 1 iams s eas e y anslon kan KM, Thompson's rabid red pencil QWN' a ,. 5 4911 Corbiere's eternal enthusiasm Bray's Wonderful Williamsburg Boehm's widow's peak 'rhimth Math Clath 30 I 9 3 6 f 0 J' J-vs X ,fin KN X l df' Q O' r-D' A as A 'KX v ' 'xx ' sf 7-. . Q We 4 131. 110- -.,.w4 ..,. ,,, V A Q ' I . IA.: x '- .4Qq.-,gg I ,K .4 1 5-.,.x l lf x 3 9 , 'X LW N F Q -v- yi ggi L I BQ .Q gms'- X, .v Xu 'L' , - 1 ' 1-4 J v' K S . pfkk - Xxx. LA 1. K A 'X X E.TQ'-INSEND- i 15.1.-Y: ' f l'.L, tx x K I Al k-my A . 5.1 ' .,g .,l .p I -I. x. ..- ,M , .f if -3- L k. Ll. K x ,1'Qf'ey,gj K af , .v '55 A X 1 Q97 ei, af' v'y4Jf ' AM bi . Q is THE CHA HAMITE :fw.e:1:+f-News, lv I W.1,rx,ff 4 ' Q fr' Ai ego R591 A vw- y J'99.,sw.Q,uan Q36- Q5 of A 02.93 'WM' if-'L' b CAV! T 'p e.,Q4n.w-as-fo - Olga'-v-C X99' N X' - we. .,.1,u f--1-X fr if Lb,-Q. signbwfbs M-L-V' 'X' 'Q-g13,l.A.l:vs-L Us . iacra..v-'-L . 1 ' 'ZLAQQLG ' t ta- !! JUNIOR cLAss 4, wi :QQ C U . 'U T' . X' 'I ,Vi I JFFIOERS . .MQW +171-,,7 P7'0.91ifl07If ..,....,,... , U ,, , , ,,..,v,, 7 ' i' N qi K 0 Q V'iC0'P7'14-N'idf37?'t ..............,...., .....,.. D OROTIIY NALLF? T Sci' rv? S'e0rwfm'g11 rmrl Tl'I'r llNIlJF I ....... ,,,,,,,,,, F 1i,mNon Tl-ERRIUK l u,.f N 1 We, ly, i Sp0n-901' .............. ....,..... .................................. ............... M I S s Bouiriw pf' ,v ' Q Q Sally Atwoocl t'arol Erskine Phoebe Perry .TURKS N12 . ' Dorothy Buttle Sally Ferguson Mary Philbin yy! Olivia 'Birekheacl Ruth Friek Gertrude Potter A QXNSXKNZ' t'Xb'S'q XL - ' 'lt .lane Gilclersleeve Virginia Prout ,Qmx 'flf-U--V74 ' Anne Bundy Jane Gooclwillie Eileen Pyle X' 1.1 ,R ,Age Laura Uarey Mary Carter Jean Uaulkins Eleanor Uhancller Marian Cowles J ean Crump filly Lorna Crute Elizabeth Derriek - 1 Betty Disston ,V - Virginia Downing L 5 lr Gloria Green Barbara Grinnell Evelyn Byrrl Henry Lueretia Houghteling Pauline Kingslancl Kitty King lVleC'rea1ly Elisa Mitchell Carroll Montgomery Anne Motley Frances Munson Gertrude Rose ' Betsy Rust ulvi' UA Betty Thorp Emilie Townsend Marcia Tuttle Margaret Vaughan Virginia Ward Naney Waters Virginia VVllll2llllS0ll Barbara Winloek ' Dlkahel Duflharine Natalie Munson Aclena Wright ,s .' . ' WJ, Mary Dykema Ann Orr Betty Zahriskie . Q -,,. t I J..--- ,Vj 1 1 ' ' Judy Butler: gone hut not forgotten. . rw' -, . lf, 5- 5 xg T K 6 32 . I I ,i CJ f A . J' I 9 3 6 .D J T ' X' J K Q Aw! ' ,D x Q4 ff ,LJ -nf f 7 I'-lla 5 I try! jx' ' , I fs - . . U. '57 ' 1 , ,lf 2 . 'B ' -' E N I ,x rx' 'T if v xi fvxy X 5 Qfff- X -fax X . 4 'rio 2? KJ' W o Q Abe X l X .........., --- '57 gpmrgfmscuva' , d , -g a . ' 'wR4cd1x mLkIiG.kQ9UJfKMEkn Nxuaq mqu g gwm AQ, 4 Q . '19 'S' . rwezi n V M742 dbudq- vC1'-L'f'- -'L- K knaru Mbkms Q3 mu gLJiL?w4LsnuJs e4LuJuuLm F- aa ,ah V THE CHATHAMITE ,A, , t. ,, M 5 ' O '- W or.. . L45 .., 0- Q- 'Wh Q ,3. NK RQRI1 Q J 04 I QI' 3' fzflv, Q , Ifbara U e E, ,A X, . V lk rug ' 'Q -, :il MD ll , LGSOQ l WHY, -rn- y. . r ' 4 'Tx Cf? , SOPHOMORE cLAss lkk Nxt .3 - - x e lilwrl lk f M ll'2'tkf, ,qli I , fig-C ,' I AG Nix x , ,S P1'esul011 f .,....,.....,.A.,...,.,.,., Sr'cl'1flm'y Il ll rl T1'1'r1,.w111'r'l' ...,..., Spo n sm' ...,... ' X A ' 9, ld xXi.'7fQc INQE ,N I, N! i523xN '19 J Susan Applegate ' ' I Patricia A 1 Jlefon bl '+qfX - , . I I l+rederic-ka Berger 'ls lima!! Dorothea Berkeley nv-043s Qc? 'ki flag Caroline Boxley Mary Eliza Brown Sarah Choate Sheila Clark Nrfbcn Qgftx Lydia Cobb CY 5.905 Qg Vxyss vu Arm 'mx X001 fe Edith Cowles Virginia Danforth Louise Dorranoe Marjorie Fletcher Belle Franklin OFFICERS MEMBICIIS Mary Jane Hart Mary ,ll ays Louise 'Ilerron Marguerite Hillman Alic-e Hollister Margaret Holt Marie Hulburd Louise Liggett Martha Melnfosh Joan Morgan Carol Murray Luey Neff 34 ...,.....lUl.1A Foluiilek ........lNI.xH'rn,x Rivixns . ....., Miss fl0Rlill'lRE Kathleeen Nllllltik Polly Pell Edith Porter Mary Skidmore Mary Sprague Helen Stephenson .lean Stewart Claire Streeter Ellen Vale Joanne lvallace Peggy Ward Florenee Wardwell Pollie Winslow Virginia Witherow 1936 5' FKESHOCN sm, mv..-4 -2:57 qi w-' -.1'AfAL7 ? ' X, - ul W. 154 -4' vnu aw- - dvr W' 'nlwuw IILE.-.l.l.o l..ld'u. ' mi. 1 swam! lolb Q J 4 Q1 '5iMM15 HQ! xg'-X We I 1'Bums19.1:q S5303 I THE CHATHAMITE Bmw X -5' 1-U, Siu-12 lv F- 4.3.43 -in U-'YY' ff! 3' cpl. 0- 'A as 4 , .s,,...A 5 AQ X fi 9,910 553 .C 6 Q96 f ..' . ' , 1 Lg -fp 671' 3' ' 'i 2 g,'. FRESHMAN CLASS 3' OFFICERS ,J Pwsideni ......,A......... ...........,,.,......,............ ........... ll I ARY FOSTER PITNICY L Vice-President ..,......... ..........,...,........... ,............. I . '1rYl.I.1s TIGNNEY I5 Sponsor ............... .................,........ .......... ll I Iss HANNA 5 E -C. MEMBERS 3 Alice Blair Mary Meliflean Mcliissick 5 Claroline Cole Anne Osborn Q5 Spun. qu.. 11414- 5 '79 5 Jean Crispell Mary Osborn . lx I I5 2 5 Q Ann Donaldson Helen Owsley W' 5 Nm. F-ll, I Julia Fisher Elizabeth Stokes WV4' '-Q-'Ag I g Frances Hathaway Marcia Williams Q 3 I , ,C JJ Janet Jamison UVM, 00,2 Margot lVood1e V 56 su 'U 'E M1 Q ef? 'TT -' ' in' Q fgvfsgfff 0 by C .. 1 of' .r fl' Vx 504- v -, ' yi ,Q9 X- X . ,aim afaf' fr 27 X 1 9 3 6 Qjxwifjfkjy i 4? ! -Q 0' ff Q52 QM WW4 ,3 Wlluxxx . 1 ff n U Q lr - llll s .V A fi ' A THE CHATHAMITE THE STUDENT COUNCIL Tho ciliicf link lwtwven the sluclvnfs uml 'fnviilty is tlio Slll4ll'llt ilfllllll'll. lvmlcr tlio l02lllUI'SlllP of Emlitli lill6Cl2lllll, it has mlm-wlopvcl :incl Wogiw-ss?-ml notzilrly tliis yum' and has gfruntly In-ssl-iiwl the gap lu-lxwoii z1utliority and the will To ki-vp within lioumls. lt lll2lllltEllllS t.l1vsvliool's honor :xml ilisi-iplimi :incl is em lll1llSIl0llS2llll0 fm-toi' in thu lizirmoiiy of school lilo. 0Fl llfEllS I'1-esirhfnl ........., ...............,........ ....,.. P 1 Dl'l'lI KNICEIEXNIJ I ia0-Prr'sirl+'r1f ,...... ,....... l i.v1'11,xRlN1c DAY M1'GlllBEliS l i'am'0s Bottle llelcu Taylor Louisu llciwivk Mary Cary Willcox liutli Mary l'vnfivl1l lnwrotizi Woomls Mzii'gn1'vt Woomls 38 l 9 3 6 THE CHATHAMITE THE SERVICE LEAGUE Following in tho footsteps ol' last y0a1 s i'2ll'l'l'lll revision ol' thi- S1-rvivv llvzlglw. this yoz1r's oi-gaiiizzitioii has i11c-11-ziswl and Sfl'E'llgtlll'lll?ll thu ottiviulu-y ol' tho Lvugiw iI'0II10Iltl0llSly. lt is elivirlcml into the szunv IlUI11lDCl' of ll0P2lI'tlll0lltS, lJl'2ll'lIlg' thc szunv titles and having tho szuue func-tions as l.Ol'I110l'ly, ll21Illl'lyZ Social Outlook tvliurity work in tho 1ll'lg.L'llll01'l100ill uncler B2ll'll2ll'?l Winloc-li with Miss llc-nslvigli ns its sponsor: Worlil Outlook fto l11'oz1clv11 our i11te1'estsJ unmlci' Ellllllltl 'l'ililvn with Miss Lowlziinl as sponsor: Rau-0 llCl2ltlOllS Qto cu-:ite :1 niorv sy11'1p11tl1e-tio tooling lmctwovii oursolws ainml thi' valves with which wo 001119 i11 l'OIlt2lLft7l uinler l'll'?llll'0S llvttlo witl1 Miss llolt as its sponsorg llcvotionzil ll0pa1't111e11t tto take Cllil-Fgl' ot' tho clmpcl Ellltl to pronioto an llltl'1'0St i11 religion as 21 wholoj under llorothy Xullc with Miss lXlO1lt2lQllC as its sponsor: and the School Life lll'll2lI'tIl1Ollt, whivli tukos vziru of thv 1llt7IllL'S, parties, and gencral 011tc-1'tz1i11111o11ts of sc-hool, 11111le1' the tllI'0t'tl0ll ol' tllzirzi Applvgute :incl its sponsor, Mrs, Brush, OFFICERS 1'1'ff-Qiflfrll ............. ...................., ...... 3 I Ain' Olin' Xl 11.1,vox l '-iw'-l'1'0.wi1i1'1'1 I ...... w,1,,,,,,,,,,, I C l'I I'Y I I mgsfm Nf'f'1'l'ff1I'y ...--,---- .,.....,.. l '11,1f1.xNo11 llmiiiivic 7'l'1ff1-WWI' ---... ..... l lirrii M un' l'icNif11ci,11 5110 -WI ---- .......................1. N lies. Ll-11-2 t7llAlllMl'lN OF lll'll'.Xlt'1'Ml'lN'l'S Dorothy Nullc tllilfil Applegzitv l4ll'tlllCCS lic-ttle Ellllillh 'llilllvll liz11'l1:11'n Winlock 39 1936 THE CHATHAMITE C. A. C. Among tho most iinportziiit UI'Qt1IllZ?lf,iOllS ol' Ullatlizlixi llall is tlic i'hz1tl1a1u Atlilvtim- Assovizition. Tlu- lllO111ll0l'S ol' its 4QIOYl'I'lllllH llmimiil :uw tho 0llfSl2lllIlllllgI altlllctos in the svliool, not only in elvtivo utliletiv ability but also in sportsniaiiisliip, lczlclclsliip, WllllIlQllUSS, mul l'Illllll'I'2lflUll. Tlwy livlp Miss Corlnii-Vo in the spring :mil l'z1ll sports. tzlkc Cl12ll'Q.fC ol' tlio pool or vourts wlion llf'CCSS2ll'y, mul i11 g'l'l1Cl'2ll make the athletic vogs tit moro smoothly uml czlsil-V. UFFIUEIIS Presidenl ,.... ..,.,.,............., ..... l ' .XTRIVIA GRANT Spmzsor .... ..... N llss tlOliH1lflHE MEMBERS Sully Atwooil Louiso Herrick l+'r'z1i10vs Buttlv Kitty Hobson VlI'gIllll2L Fziri' Eclitli Km-vlzuicl llorotliy Nzlllc 40 I 9 3 6 THE CHATHAMITE Jw, THE BIT AND SPUR CLUB T110 B11 111111 Spur 1111111 1s 111111' 111u1' y11111's 11111 111111 1s 111111 111' 11111 most 1111p0r111111 111'g11111z11t11111s 111 1110 s1'h1111l. 1'l1111l111111 111111. l111111g 111 Y1l'gI1ll12l, is 1l111'1'l'S1l'11 111 l'1ll1ll:EI 11's 1 llllllll 1111 1 11111 11111 1Il11'1'1'41 111 11111 11111111-1' 1-11111 111111 111111111' Mr. 111111 Mrs. 131111s 1' '1 111 , . ,. . 11111115' new 1'11111rs 1111110 1111011 1u1'11111l 111111 11xp111'111111-011 l1111's1111'111111111. 111111111 111'1'l'll 1s 11111 1'1'11s11111111 this y1111r and sl1e 1111s g11'1111 il g1'11111 1111111 111' 11111' 111111wl111lgc 111111 11ssis111111'11 1101 only 111 1110 n111111l111rs 111 11111 1111111 11111 111 2111 11111 1'11l111's. 111 .1111111 11111 11111111l1111's 11I' 11111 1111111 sI11111s111' 11111 11111's11 Show 111111 1111' 11111' Day 11111.y 1115111 p1'1111111111 21 111111111111 D1'1117' 111111 u'11OHI'1lilIH0ll1.1, Many 111111' 111811111013 1111111 11111111 111111111 111 1,l11s 11111' 11111 11111y 1111 11111 l111s1s 111' 11111111 skill 111 l'111lllt31' 11u1 11ls11 1111' 11111ir sp111'1s1111111sl1111 111111 W11l1llglll'SS 111 1'111111111'11111. 211111 we 11111111 E1 111111111111 111 l'2lI'I'y 1111 11111 S11'1lll11'Y 1l1l'l'l'2lS1lIgl' 1111111'11s1 111111 s11111-11ss, 111111 '11111 whom we wish Fl 1111111 111111 11 111111si1111111 11q1111l1y 11111111. P1'es1'd1311t ...,..,....., 1Y1l'0-I,I'l?S'l:dI3Ilf .................. Sc1'1'11l114'y ll ll 11 Tr1111.w111'111' ..,.. Sponsor ......,............,.,...... Il0lL0l'll'7'y HIFI!! 11111' ..... Mary 13111111051 1311111111 li 1111111111111 Day V1l'tQ,'1l11?1 D1'1w11111g Molly 1l11ys A1100 Hollister 1936 OFFICERS ME111BE11S 41 01.111111 G111f:1cN 1JA'l'l1ll'l.1 RANT 811.111 .X'1'w111111 ........M11. B1111s11 .....,M11s. 111111811 l3111'l1111'11 1111111 .I111111111111 Hoyt Yirg111111 171111111 111111111 Y11l11 M2ll'Q.fOt W1111111e , , ' ' fx 1 11 21 f'1,a.JTf 1 L ,. , ,QL YLQ4-LK 1k1sUF- 11 1,'fkP3- gxvfgl xi I, ,V ,xy I - yy I X :XV I 5 5:1 I i J, I LV P x Y on ? X3 3 J' I .fp Aw , s .1 ,F 4 .-' THE CHATHQAMITE X ' J-93 , K u fix. N S X 4 1936 THE CHATHAMITE THE SHERWOOD DRAMATIC CLUB This year the Dramatic Club has become not only a club for acting but also for training in eostmues, scenery, and make-up. It has been divided into two different sections, the Acting Dramatic Club and the Dramatic Association. It has increased Hlld improved amazingly under Miss Hodgman's supervision Elllil Virginia Prout's leadership in the capacity of president. Many extremely well acted and well directed plays have afforded amusement for the whole school, for families, and, at times, for the townspeople. Among the principal plays of the year were Oscar Wildeis The Importance of Being Earnest tllld the Commencement play, The Man Who Mar- ried a Dumb Wife. THE DANCE CLUB The Dance Club is an entirely new experiment and i11 one year has developed so quickly that it must forever remain an institution of Chatham Hall. It has pro- duced under the management and imagination of Miss Hanna two wonderful recitals. The first was a series of disconnected, interpretive dances beautifully arranged. The second was the story of The White Peaeockj, written and directed by Elmina Tilden, the President of the club, with Kitty King Mclfready as the pea- cock itself. Both recitals were thrilling, well costumed, lighted, a11d produced 3 and we hope that next year will continue this organization and carry o11 its interesting work. THE SHERWOOD DRAMATIC CLUB OFFICERS President ............................. .............................. ......... V 1 RGINIA Paotrr Secretary 111111 Treasuiref' ...... ........ I IELHN TAYLOR Sponsor ...........................................................................................,........ Miss HODGMAN MEMBERS OF THE ACTING DRAMATIC CLUB Clara Applegate Mary Bentley Booth Caroline Boxley Betty Branch Sarah Choate Marian Cowles 'Virginia Danforth Elizabeth Derrick Elizabeth Disston Isabel DuCharme Ann Ely Marjorie Fletcher 1936 Julia Foraker Patricia Grant Janet Gregory Barbara Grinnell Mary Jane Hart Edith Kneeland Louise Liggett Kitty King McCready Martha McIntosh Nancy Meier 43 Ann Motley Dorothy Nalle Ruth Mary Peniield Gertrude Potter Ann Orr Elmina Tildcn Elizabeth Warriner Mary Cary Willcox Marcia Williams Virginia Williamson Ann Van Alstyne Betty Zabriskie THE CHATHAMITE MEMBERS OE THE DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION Crew O os turning Virginia Farr Sally Atwood Helen Duke Ruth Erick Kitty Hobson Ann Orr Polly Pell Maisie Philbin Emilie Townsend Make-up Natalie Munson Evelyn Byrd Henry Eleanor Herrick Gertrude Potter Gertrude Rose THE Prudence Smith Jean Caulkins Carolyn Cote Alice Hollister Martha McIntosh Elisa Mitchell Joan Morgan Kathleen Nimick Sarah Rapalje Phyllis Tenney Lucretia Woods Margaret Woods Ligfz ting DANCE CLUB Phoebe Perry Ann Donaldson Virginia Downing Belle Franklin Helen Taylor OFFICERS President ............. ....,.,.,............,........, .,................. E I ,MINA TIIDIN Vice-President ......... ......... K ITTY KING MGCREADY Sponsor ............ ..................i..... ..................... M I ss HANNA MEMBERS Clara Applegate Mary Applegate Olivia Birckhead Betty Branch A1111 Bundy Laura Carey Sibyl Coates Jean Crump Virginia Danforth Julia Foraker Janet Jamison Edith Kneeland Elisa Mitchell Ann Motley Phoebe Perry Ruth Mary Penfiold Mary Foster Pitney Gertrude Potter Virginia Prout Prudence Smith Jean Stewart Phyllis Tenney Betty Zabriskie 44 1936 I 9 THE CHATHAMITE THE CHOIR ll111l1-1-Miss .Xlllll'llS.S 11111gi1- 1li1-111-tim1 tlw l'lI4llI' lms lN'l'4lllll' :Ill 1111-1-1-:1si11+1lx xlt 1l Null ll l1:1s 1l1n11- il 1f1'1111f 1l11:1l ul lllll' wwlc. as I111' lIlNl lllll 1 IHl1'l ul' flu- svlmol. 'l'l1is r. :1g11':111t with 1'2lI'0lS 111 f'l11'isfl11:1s. DuringH1111'11111's1-ul'Tl11-nw-111', tl111 Illl'llllll lN ll. '2l1'llL'4l lllilllj' now llyllllw. illllllllllli Zlllll 4'll2llllS. At l1utl1 llllI'lSll!lIlS illlll lam .1pp1'up1'l11l1-llynllls111'1':11'11ls worn' sung Il1l'll1lQ.1'l1 tlw lmlls ul' lrlillllll'-Y :lml llllllllll IN .111 uvcning va-spu1's :mel 21 1111n'l1il1g11111til1s. MIQMHEHS OF 'I' 4' l'l:11':1 gNlllIll'Q.Q'2lll' Dolly l31'l'liulvy llmwulll-Y llvlllu lllill'-Y llllllllt'-N' liuotlm xvlllfllllil ll2lllll0l'lll li111l1111'i11v D11-Y lCIiza1I111tl1 Disslmm lAllllH0 lJol'I'z1111-1' Ylll'll'll lluliv llvlsy Fulls llillll' llll1l1-1'sl1-vx'1- .T111114 GI'CgHl'.Y Louise ll,CI'l'Oll 3 6 llL l'l Bvlly Z?llbl'lSlill' 45 Hill? Hclitll lilIl'l'l2lllkl Kitty' lii11gBI1'i'1'1f111l-x NQIIIQY lxll'll'l' l'1lis:1Milvl11-II Nillilllkl lxlllIlSHll lllllll Mm'-x' l'1111livl4l lll'l'll'Illll' l,lllll'I' Yll'Qllll2l P1-11111 .l11li:1 llogc-rs illill'-X' Slii1l111111'0 l'llllllIl2l 'llilllvn l'lI'2lIll'US Yilllpfllilll lll111'g111'1-t xlilllgllilll C 1? -1 dv I' --1 4 'I ' .- 0 'vvc If ,,.4 ff ' -if I-I , J 0 ' .. . 11 -- 1 's ' Aw f-'1j'HE,eHAT1-IAMITE 'I , , 1 1 ..4' iv 9' 1 ' Zz f -f : 1 Q. , ,I ' Q ff! .-9 f 1 4' .3 ' ,v .a ,ke 5' 1 I cf 1-7 fo' TH E GLEE CLUB Last yvzir tlim-rv was 1111 Gleo Ululi :incl tlu- Uliuir prcsm-11l1-fl tliv upviw-tlzi, lmul This Vvnr Miss llopo Millvr lIllfl0I'll1Uli to orgaiiiim- :1 rm-:il glen- a1ss11ri:1Tim1 illlil luis s111-- rvvmlvll 1'o11111rk:1l1l.V. S110 coiimliivtofl il 110111-1-rl 4llll'lllg' tlw firsl ll'l'll1 Zlllrl p1'11sc'111o1l Uillw1'l Elllll SlIlllYHl1,S Mik11rl11 1llll'llljI lllll swmiil, 11111111 ul' wliivli was 21 lltlfilllll' siwvoss. 'l'l1e l'1'11si4lc11l is BlEll'.V Hoiillvy liootli who ll21S iiplwlil lliz- l111si11Qss Q-ml ol' ilu- c-lulr zuliiiirzilmly. fll7lI'H Applrgzilu Dolly Bc1'kel0.v 11111-01111' BP11111 Mziry l3e11tl0y Rmmtli Erlitli Cowles Virginia Dzinfurtli Kz1tl1111'i11v Day Louise Dorrmice Helen Dukv A1111 Ely Carol Erskine NIICBIISIGITS UF 'l'llF 1 1GlElui'll H Bvlslv Fvlls .lmw Gilflwslvvvv .I11110t Gregory l40lllSl' ll0l'I'0lI K?llll0I'lll0 Hobson l'I1lill1 Klwolaiirl liouiso T1iQg'Pft Kitty King' lllf'flTO Naiiry 3I0ll'I' Elisa Mite-in-ll 46 El cl 3' Nulaliv Munsmi llutli Mary l'011fi0lrl Geilriirlv Potts-r Vir,qi11i:1 Proul Mary Slilfilllllllf Mary Sprzigwc El111i11z1 Tilcleii Fl'ilIlCOS Vauglimi 1l2lI'gIHI'0l Vziuglmii Afloim Wright Helly Znlmriskie 1936 THE CHATHAMITE DISCUSSION GROUPS The discussion groups have become a permanent part of the school life owing to their success in the past two years. They give Rllll take earliest thought on both the part of the leaders and that of the groups. These groups are held on one Sunday each month and are given over to discussing topics that affect everyone in some way as Christians and as individual people. Mrs. Lee helps the leaders formulate their own ideas and plans of putting forth the subject and they in turn present it to their groups for consideration and discussion. lt is not compulsory to belong to these groups but this year no one has withdrawn. LEADERS Clara Applegate Janet Gregory Sally Atwood Nancy Meier Frances Bettle Ruth Mary Pentleld Katharine Day Sarah Rapalje Ann Ely Prudence Smith Ehnina Tildeu THE MARSHALS Marshals, the new addition to our disciplinary forces, have created for them- selves a lasting position in the school. Their duties a1'e to see that general order is maintained, to preserve an orderly appearance in study hall, and to act as ushers during entertainments in Willis Hall. MEMBERS Head Marshall, Mary Applegate Helene Bosworth Frances Munson Betsy Felts Sarah Rapalje Patricia Grant Gertrude Rose 47 1936 THE CHATHAMITE CLUBS LITERARY CIRCLE This club, organized purely for pleasure, is for the purpose of reading aloud favorite essays, stories, and poems so that different opinions and tastes may be disclosed. Miss Holt is the Sponsor and Betty Branch, the President, and between them they have chosen many thrilling, spooky,,' and amusing masterpieces of literature. THE BIRD CLUB Eleanor Herrick is the President and leader of this club. She has done some very fine Work in the study of birds and has done much to promote a real interest in them and their habits. This last year the organization has grown greatly and has learned much from its bird walks? THE ART CLUB The Art Club is a new organization this year and, although it has not had much opportunity to display the talent of its members or to grow very much, it has made a good beginning. Lucretia Woods as president and Mrs. Cousins as sponsor did much to stimulate effort towards the drawing of plates for the Year Book. TH E ASTRONOMY CLUB Barbara Hoyt is the capable President and under Miss Marshal1,s guiding hand she supervises star-gazing on clear nights. This is lots of fun and is a very interest- ing form of study. THE MUSIC CLUB With Miss Andrus as sponsor and Virginia Danforth as president the Music Club is most successful. There are formal and informal meetings at which the various members show their talents at the piano, and to which occasionally visitors are invited and tea is served. THE CAMERA CLUB Phoebe Perry is the President this year and she has arranged several well balanced charts of photographs on the bulletin board from which we could choose the pictu1'es which most appealed to us. Thus we preserve Chatham Hall, its familiar faces, and its lovely grounds. 48 l936 A gf aw 5 g sig? 1, 115 Tues SOCCER TEAM WINNER and RUNNERWJP Of' GOLF TOURNAMENT vlansrrv r-mek: v 'rs AM THE CHATHAMITE SPORTS OF 1936 HE first sporting event of 1935-36 was held in the early fall. This was the Funny Swimming Meet, a contest between the Purple and Gold senses of humor. The Golds laughed so hard at the Purples that they neglected their own humor with the result that the Purples won and the Golds gallantly rewarded them with a Ha1lowe'en Party. Next came the archery tournament on November sixth. Ruth Frick won first place for the Golds and Helen Taylor, also a Gold, was runner-up. The golf tourna- ment, which took place on the same day, was attended by a large gallery, dogs included, to watch the Bobby-Jones-like play of Kitty Hobson and Louise Herrick. After a close game Kitty who had continually played below par won with a score of 35-winning the second Purple victory of the year. Eagles and birdies were made by both players and there were many breathless moments. Tommy broke loose at the crucial put, but he was ruthlessly caught by Miss Stewart and the day was saved. On a freezing day in early November Chatham Hall shivered out to watch some brilliant tennis by Grant and Atwood, final contestants in the singles matches. Spectacular playing by both prolonged the game in a succession of ties, but finally Sally, a Purple, conquered and we all trooped in to partake of ice cream. The A doubles were won by Motley and Atwood, again Purples, against their Gold oppon- ents, Grant and Biddle-Bettleg the B singles, by Appleton, a Gold, with Urute, runner-upg and the C singles, by Pitney, a, Purple, with Willcox, runner-up. So we ended the early fall sports and started soccer. Often it was muddy, but we struggled on. Finally the big day of the team games came. The Golds walked off with the second team honors, but the first team game was a tie. Two extra quarters were added and it was still a tie. Afternoon was growing into evening and the end of the game was drawing near when Stevie, panic-stricken, appeared between the Gold goal posts with a White Flag, rendering powerless the onrushing Purples, enabling the Golds to remove the ball to safety, and the score remained a tie. Between the snow and the rain we managed a day or two of hockey practice before the final games, on March twenty-fifth. Miss Corbiere prayed so fervently over the field that the mud thinned down to only an inch or two, while the gallant teams fought bravely. The Purples won the first team game and the Golds, the second- and everyone was happy. We must not neglect to mention Chatham Hall's outstanding sport of the Winter Term, walking in the rain, which we have learned to do rather Well for a secondary school. Now we must go to press before the spring sports begin. These include basketball, baseball, tennis, swimming, archery, golf, and badminton. Which will be the winning team is not even a matter of conjecture now-the evenness of the two teams' abilities as thus far shown is too great. But may the best team win! 51 1936 THE CHATHAMITE THE MAY COURT Quggn ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,4,,,,,,,,.,,,.,,,,,,,A.,,,,,..,,......,........ ....... I4 J DITH IxN1u1 XND Maid of Honor... Katharine Day Clara Applegate Mary Applegate Patricia Grant 1 r .........LUCRETIX Wooos COURT LADIES Louise Herrick Dorothy Nalle Mary Cary Willcox Margaret Woods THE TOURNAMENT PURPLE TEAM Sally Atwood, Captain Clara Applegate Gloria Green Ellen Vale Barbara Wiuloek Winner, Sally Atwood GOLD TEAM Margot Woodle, Captnifz, Virginia Danforth Julia Fisher Ruth Frick Ruth Mary Penfield 52 I 9 4 Q 4 1 1 THE CHATHAMITE ff if fi 'ff gf l D 5352? 1 Ei. gg ' -z -E x H, Q E2 wx E ri X X - XX ,. :E ,r ' 'EY ' E57 Y! X Nt, 5 -'zz M fx .N Y R , N- X . ' f 1 .v E 4 'S Lf vp E mf, I f , X-Ig, lv T12 'iq E w flf ' Q. E 551' QW 'W ' , if NQJ -ff - 'Z - - .fb X 'W' 9' 15, 'Qtf' E 39' ' W 1-if I, -1:16, VM -V ' XM jj? 3 Xi fs 1 E- 4,157 I , 'f , -E M- Qjlfr. 'L 'l:'2 ' 7 Lf' . ...E - - E -A A 'fnzff 'fn,,. NW E's'Z7 1.1512 .aqwf 'f +431 I E. N wg- 4, 'iw '-,vga Y-K, ., Y f - - ,. A 'r,' f ,N x' 1 V -1 fu l g K -7 2 -gg ir! av -131,1 gf-:.., ..'7 ?Z I . . - 4. ' X142 A.1.. Ag- 1 - -.-fy E17 -1 .: -:E ,IU f -L , - k .5 T - ...Ln -,Il 5 E -r Eglwviigf 1 1,5-., f xl fi Wy' . Q . ,,, :lil ,L ng f y .2 A V : ,,,, , .fc MAE? , U - ,H dt' .l yfgf' .Uv ,u ,ll -If . '-A E ,111 - , - rf- f .t . E J 4 L- E,-,gg 4 9 Q .E Eg- -' in E- A- f 1, H Lim' K EEL- -, -, E ' 'SV A 51.5.5-it-E 'f f ' 'Nagy 'T J i V N Y .fgsgsg -AJ In - L 2 -, -'ififwfs A , E J.: . D 9 1 ii :,.- N f HONOR ROLL FIRST SEMESTER 1935-1936 VLARA Al'l'LEliATE IVNEIJERIQTKA HERGEI? UAHULINE BUXLEY liE'l l'Y BIMNVII MARY ELIZA 'BROWN ANN DONALIJSUN HELEN IDVKE MARY DYKEMA B E'l l' Y .IITLLX FORAKEH MARY JANE IIAIVI' LOVISE IIEHRUN KATII LE EN NIMTUK I'l1I'lJENl'E SNIVVII' HELEN '1'AYl.UR PU YLLIS 'FENNEY MARVIA WILLIAMS ZAHIIISIQIE :14 1936 THE CHATHAMITE HURDY-GURDY 1111' 111111-11111 g111'111-111-1' 11':1s 1'1-111' 111'1-11. 111- 111111 s111-111 21 1llllQ112llX' 11'111'14111g' 1lX1'l' 1111' -111111111115 111111 111111-1s 21111111111 1111- 1111111 111111 1l1S1'1111l'1S11l11 11111 S1'1'llI 111 111111-111-1-11 1'1-11'111'111-11J1111- 1111111 just 11111 1111! 11l1l1i 11111'1111111'1-. .X11 111-11, 1111-s1- 1l1'111111'1i11l'1Y 1111111i11g 111111111 Q'2l1'111'11lllQ.l'1 .X11 1111-11' X1'2lll11'11 11'11s 21 111'1-111' 11il1'1ig'1'111l1l11 1111' 1111- X1'1'11111IlQ. 111 il 111-1-11 1111- 2l11'il1l' 111111111 111- 1111-1'. 211111 111s ,11111 111111111 111- 1111111-. '1'111- g1'ill'111'lI 111111111 p'1'1111111111.x'g'11111 1'11111 1111' 1111-11 111 11111-11111111, 211111 111-11111s1 X1'2l1I111'l' 111111111 S1'1'1il1l1,1'2l'11l11, .Xs111-s11111111-11 111111-1-11 111121 11151 l12111111'111111. S1111 s11'11111s 111 IIIIISI1'1111il11'1111X'1'1'11I1' g211'11l111 111111. 11 lllllS1 111- 1111' 11111-111-g'111'11.1'1 111- 11s11-111-11 s11:11-1' '1111' 811111111 11111'11.1's 111'lll1g111 11-111's 111 111s 1'.X'l'S1111 i1s111's1 s111'i11g' 1111111-11111111-1-. '11111' 11111si1- s11111111-11 11111' il S1'1'1l1111, 211111 11l1'I1 1111111111-1' 11lIl1' 1-111111- 111 1111- Q'2l1'111'll1'l'1r 1'2l1'4. I11'11S1l'11l'11 111111. 11s 111- 1-11s1- 1111115 11-1-1. 11'1111-11 1115 1121111151111 1118 1111.151 111'1-1'1111s. 1111111l1'Il1l1'S111111111l1111'S1111. '11111' 111111' 11'11s 21 1.121-Y. 111111- 1111111-11111111 2l11'. 11'11i1-11 11111111-11 211111 1jll1'g.1'11'11 1111'111 1'l'111ll 1111- 11111'11-1'-g1111'11-1. 21 S11'1'il1II11'1 1l1'S1l111111. , , A . . . 1111- g111'111-111-1' 11'11s 1'I'j'lll1,1' f111- 14111-11' I1 11'11s s111'1'. 11111 1111- 111111- 1111s s11 11:llll1112lI'1 i11s1-1-1111-11 11s 11111111111 111111 s1111111' .111111- 11111, S11 111111.11 11311. X1'1'l'1' 11111 11-1 111 111'111S1'. :11111 111111 111' 1111s s1111 112lIl1'111Q,l'111 1111- 1i11111g' s11'11111s 111. 11111si1- 1111 1111- Q1'1'1'1I 1111111 1114 111:- 11111911 311111111-, 11'1111 11 111111, 215 S1l1'111SS1'11 1l1'l'1l1111l111'1'lII'1S111'1'11l'1'1l1S 11111--1111zx11-11 1'.Yl'S. u1,11'ilS1'. N113 11111111-111-1'. 111111111 11111111 11111' 111111- s1111'11-s ? il 51112111 11111111 111111-11 1111 11'11111 111-1111111 111111. 111111' Q2ll'111'1l1'l' 1111'111-11 s11111'11' 211111 s1111' Il 111111' 11111111111 1-111111 s1:11111i11g 111 11l1'1lI'lIl1x 111 1111' 1111111 111111 1l1'1' 1111111 111'l'SB l'i1F1111Q s11'1-1-1 1'1-111-1'111111s1111 1111'114111111'. 1936 THE CHATHAMITE Why, yes, my little one, he answered slowly, as he pondered what fairy tale to tell her. But ever tilld again his Hilda danced before his mind's eye. Ah! He would tell her story- lt was a beautiful, blithe June day a11d every one was very, very happy. Frederic and Hilda had been dancing 011 the green law11 of the inn to the strains of an accordion, whenever Frederic and Hilda danced, you could not help but enjoy life. They were so pretty together, she in her white blouse and red skirt, with her golden hair and flashing eyes, he in black and white, his curly hair standing on end. The two were so happy together-every one knew that they were to be married in a month. The dance ended with a shout. Frederic picked up the lovely girl and carried her triumphantly to the table out under the trees, a11d there they sang together, in a gay carol of young love. The guests at the i1111 carrie out to listen, and were so delighted with the song that the two were compelled to sing again and agai11. The young American, who had arrived the night before, seemed especially to enjoy the song, and Frederic noted, with a tinge of jealousy, that the foreigner seemed transfixed by Hilda,s beauty. But the lad soon overcame this thought, and the festivities ended with a general burst of applause. Two days later, Hilda had go11c. Frederic heard this 11ews in stupefiegl amaze- ment but his anger was terrible when he learned that his darling had gone with the American. He had not thought that any man would do such a thing. He and Hilda were betrothed! He could not Hnd it in his heart to blame I1 er. She was so lovely and he felt convinced that she had loved him. As time went on, and no news came, he found that he could not stay there, where he had lost her. He still saw her in her red and white dress, dancing before his eyes. And so Frederic went to Berlin. leaving no word at Miinne of his intentions. With the money he had saved for his wedding he studied horticulture the had always loved Howersl in a wild attempt to forget Hilda illld the American. He did not succeed in this endeavour, for he still unconsciously clung to a faint hope that some day he would see her again. However, with the flowers he prospered, and soon he was sent by an important Berlin florist to America to represent the firm in New York. Frederic enjoyed America, and the city, with its tall towers, its girdle of two great rivers, its vast numbers of milling inhabitants somehow soothed his restless- ness. There was such variety, such color, in the diversions of thc metropolis, that he felt almost Uperfeetly happy? But still, the sight of a blonde, curly head would startle him. Soon the world became stirred with the lust to kill g before long, men slaughtered each other joyfully on a dozen European battlefields. The Hower firm in Berlin no longer needed a representative in America: Frederic lost his job, and somehow he had not the ambition to seek another. As time passed, 56 l936 THE CHATHAMITE he lived more and more poorly, taking part-time jobs, and worrying little about thc future. Finally, he gained a small reputation as a gardener, and made a scanty living by tending the flowers of the nouveau riche- o e o 0 n The old man looked down at the little child, but found her gone. The tale had not been of interest to one so young. He sighed, and straightened up, preparatory to going home. But the sun was so warm, the violets smelled so sweet, and the moss about the pool was so soft that he lay down, and, in the passing of time, fell asleep. A tabloid newspaper blew across the garden, and lodged itself about old Frederic's feet. Perhaps, if he had not been sleeping so soundly, he might have opened it, and perchance have glanced at the following extract from amongst the public notices: Frederic-I have just learned your whereabouts. There is much to explain-I must see you. Hilda. But the gardener was too soundly asleep to wake and catch the paper before the next gust of wind blew it off. The last rays of the sun touched his face in a benedic- tion, before they left the garden quite dark and still. -BETTY ZABRISKII-I. '37 57 I 9 3 6 THE CHATHAMITE PHANTASY Long lashes curled upward and blue eyes sparkled. Chubby little hands clutched at the counterpane in sheer ecstasy. Hlow soon will he come? Nurse said that he was the most nicest man ever horned. She said he was tall and had long curly white hair and sleepy eyes, and that he would make me dream such be-u-tiful thi11gs. I do wish heid come lv Slowly, softly the window opened and a dark figure crept over the sill, a figure whose dim outline showed a very tall man dressed in rather bulky garments. The floor creaked alld the boy sat up, bouncing up and down with excitement. Oh youive come at last! I knew you would. Now please tell me a story! A be-u-tiful storyf' The tall figure started and said i11 a low gruff voice, Be quiet. You must go to slcep before you can like my story ll' He strode over to the bed and raised his arm, but the boy grabbed it with his fat, little one and said, Please sit down. You are big like my Daddy and he used to sit and tell me stories, and you must tell me one so that he can hear it from the stars? The man stiffiy dropped his arm and sank onto the bed. He began: . Far away in the shadows of remembering, a little boy stood in a field of stars. All around him were soft clouds of different colors and tall gay fiowcrs towered above him, and his eyes were bright and always looking up, above the clouds. He walked between quiet pools of emeralds Hllll sapphires, the most precious of all stones, and a breeze from the snowy moon played with his hair. He was very happy. There was no backwards, o11ly a road stretching out before him-ever lovely, leading him on. He walked down this road for years and years, always looking straight ahead allli smiling because it was so beautiful. The sun showered him with golden dust and the blue of night made him cool. Then all of a sudden the road was 110 longer there, and he began to fall. He fell a11d fell through a terrible blackness. His head spun and he did not know what had happened. He fell for so long that he almost forgot the garden of youth up among the stars and began to think ugly thoughts instead of happy, white-wi11ged ones. He fell so far that he stole his self-respect away and gave it to the first fancy he could find. He did not care any more. He was not happy, he was sad and lost and alone and-and-. The boy was lying quite still now 3 the lashes drooped and covered the sparkle of the blue eyes. He breathed quietly and there was a sad smile on his lips. The tall figure rose and moved over to the window quietly. I guess there is always a bottom to the darknessf' he said, and he crept out the same way he had come in. --ANN ELY, '36 ss 1936 THE CHATHAMITE OF JOY AT EASTER V She had gone from him i11 the dark of October, when a cold wind raged outside, and the falling leaves told of a year that was dying. She had not wanted to go, for she was very young, and life had. been good to her. She had clung to him, a little afraid, her eyes begging him for some reassurance. But the grim visitor would 1l0t wait, and with her had gone all the gladness of the man's life. Six months had passed, and still the thought of her was to him as a sharp pain, and he could not sleep for remembering her white face and pleading eyes. He had grown bitter in those few months. Naturally quiet and retiring, he had become even more reserved. He went his way in silence, speaking to no one, walking alone. In his first wild despair, he would often brave the winter storms, to walk ceaselessly up and down through the long nights, trying in this way to find restful oblivion. And then he had thrown himself into his work, and spent long hours in the library among his books seeking consolation in them. Spring carrie on, and he closed his windows against the songs of the birds. And in his house, dark curtains were drawn early that he might not see the budding of the trees and the first green shoots of grass. In the cool of evening, he walked along some country road, striving to leave behind him the lights of the city, the cheerful bustle of it, even humanity itself. He was glad when no ray of light troubled the increasing darkness, for his spirit had aged, and hope had gone from him, and faith. Yet for some reason when he saw the radiance of the sun on Easter morning a certain gentleness came to him, and he arose and went to the church. The su11 streamed through high-arched windows, casting a rosy light on those who knelt in prayer. There was a coolness and repose in the shadows which was very good. The scent of lilies, emblems of joy, was everywhere, and their purity and whiteness dazzled his eyes. The organ pealed forth i11 a burst of glorious music, and quite suddenly peace came to him, and more than peace, a quiet joy. And a vision came to him of her he had loved. She smiled with inlinite tender- ness, and her face was no longer the tortured visage which had so long haunted him, but one of radiant happiness. She came to him lightly, swiftly. And across his mind passed remembrance of all the days they had spent together, ,midst the falling leaves of autumn, in midwinter snow, in the blossoming of spring, 'and through long summer months under the boughs of old trees, the leaves of which whispered above them, while the pale stars shone an infinity away. All bitterness went from him, for he knew surely that she was with him then and always, and that they two would be together for all eternity. His sorrow passed before a deep sense of exultation, and as the beautiful Easter service opened, he knelt and thanked God, greatly rejoicing, for Eastertide had come, and all things lived again. -JANET W. GREGORY, '36 so 1936 THE CHATHAMITE v THE COURTSHIP OF DEATH Once there was a soldier. He was an English soldier in 1776, and wore a scarlet coat and carried a long gun with a bayonet at the end of it. 'He was rakish and attractive, as this species of defenders often is. When the Kingds orders came to sail for America, our young man, one Charlie, son of Lord Randal of Small-Weldby- by-the-Wold, packed up his own belongings, stole some of his brother's clothes and embarked for the colonial wilds. The first day on board his ship, the Lord Burtie, Charlie was violently sick. The second day he rallied, and by the time Boston was reached, our hero felt quite chipper, and ready to fight any rebel. Aha, my man, said he to worthy Captain Mackenzie, are there pretty girls in America? Are there good taverns in this forsaken place? Are there balls ? Yes,,' replied Captain Mackenzie, spitting thoughtfully over the side of the ship, but not in Boston. Only in Philadelphia and New York does one Hnd levity. Besides, I doubt very much if you'll find much time for that sort of thingf, Soon afterwards, Charlie was enlisted as Private Randal. Six months later, Captain Randal surveyed his troops. Company dismissedf' he roared. The privates hurriedly broke ranks and dis- appeared, singly or in groups, in all directions. Their leader looked wistfully about. No girls,', he thought. UNO beer, no balls! He heaved a great sigh, turned himself around, and stalked off toward the meeting house where the native Bostonians Were gathered at their evening prayers. The Captain stuck his head in the door, then entered. Every head turned. That is-every head but one. This one was blonde and finely shaped. At last, it too rotated slowly, and Randal found himself staring into the loveliest face that he had ever seen. ln spite of her fair hair Rlltl skin, her eyes were dark and fathomless. She was dressed in black, shimmering stuff, such as the Captain had never seen. It gleamed in the soft candle-light and reflected all that went on in the house. In her liquid eyes he saw his own refiection, distorted and grotesque. With an effort he tore his glance from hers. Who is that IW he asked in a low tone of one of the worshipers. I don't know, replied the Puritan. l,ve never seen her before, yet she seems familiar. Then, remembering that he spoke to an enemy, Begone Sirrahf' and the speaker turned away. Captain Randal left, and not far behind him, slipping along as silently as a shadow, walked the stranger, a weird, inscrutable smile on her pale mouth. In 1781, Major Randal pushed southward with Lord Cornwallis to Yorktown. He dismounted, and finding that there were a few leisure hours before the siege was to begin, he sauntered about the town, watching the preparations for battle, and stopping on a hill to look down and see the French and Americans getting supplies from their fieet. A sudden movement made him turn. A cold fear clutched at his heart. There before him more silent, more enchanting than ever was the girl of so 1936 THE CHATHAMITE Boston. She was smiling her deadly sweet smile, and over her black dress she worc an oddly contrasting hooded cloak of blood-red. The Major recovered himself suliiciently to say: Your servant, Madam, and he bowed. For a moment a faint gleam of amusement came into hcr eyes, and in that gleam he saw many fools of long ago shaking their haublcs and laughing uproariously. From a great distance he heard high, gay voices-then silence. The girl turned slowly and seemed to float over the grass. Randal looked in horror. V. here she went, the flowers curled and drooped. A piece of her cloak caught on a bramble, and the bush withered and turned brown. The Major walked slowly down the hill. General Lord Randal, retired from active service, sat at his desk writing a letter. When one is seventy-six, letters do not seem to come easily, and he twirled his pen rather vaguely in his fingers. He reminisced a little bitterly. No more women. No beer this hearty, and positively no dancing. Well, his had been a full life, and he was happy. A knock at the door aroused him. Come in,', Randal said, lifting his hand- some head. Come in. The door opened and the girl came in. A faint tinge of color was in her cheeks, andrshe held out her hand invitingly. Her smile was sweet and gentle. She was attired in white as a bride might be. Come,,' she said, and her voice rang deep and clear as a bell. He kissed her lovely hand. He looked into her eyes. Before him, spread out over the ages, were men, women, and children, sporting, singing, playing, and some mourning-Caesars, philosophers, kings, peasants, all holding out their arms to him, calling wildly, echoing her tone, Come General Lord Randal took the girl,s hand. Major Randal rose. Captain Randal took a step toward her. Charlie Randal, with a scarlet coat and a long gun, kissed his love and stepped with her into the past. -ELISA MITCHPILL, '37 . A WINTER'S NIGHT Daniel and I lay on the large bear rug one evening in front of a blazing fire, listening to the wind as it howled around the old house, rattling the shutters in its search for an entrance and drifting the snow against the small-paned windows. From above came the sound of subdued voices, and a feeling of gloom and tragedy hung over the low-ceilinged room, for upstairs in her bed lay Mother, nearing the crisis in a severe case of double bronchial pneumonia. Presently several men came heavily down the steep stairs, and Father appeared, looking worn and tired. Daniel, my lad, we need more kerosene for the big oil lamp in time for the next injection at eleven o'clock tonight, he said as Dan stood up. I see nothing to do but to ask you to go for it in the sleigh. You can get it from the florral's down the mountain. Hurry, won't youli' hc added in a whisper. Dan was already pulling on his leather boots, and he told me to dress warmly and be ready to go with him as soon as he had harnessed Knight to the small cutter, 61 1936 THE CHATHAMITE for I might be needed. In a few minutes We were warmly bundled up in the sleigh, trotting at a brisk pace down the firmly-packed mountain road toward the farm of our nearest neighbor, Mr. Corral, who lived in the Tall Forest, five miles down the mountain side. My brother, a tall, tireless boy of fifteen, whom nothing ever seemed to frighten or worry, held the reins firmly, and spoke in scarcely audible 'tones to Knight, who, being a nervous creature and unused to such extreme cold, was pulling hard and bucking at intervals. From a stormy sky, the large moon shone weakly down upon the snow-covered hills and bare trees, turning them into unreal shadows of cold blue and white. As we wound amongst the great pines of Tall Forest, the wind whistled strangely, and the sha.dows became blacker and more startling. As we approached the little farmhouse, Knight started violently, for a tiny black dog rushed out of the carriage house, barking shrilly. The empty five- gallon kerosene can in the back of the sleigh rolled with an alarming crash onto the hard road, and Knight, leaping forward in fright, jammed a runner into the icy bank. With a splintering jar, the cutter lurched to a standstill, and, our robes still around us, we were thrown into a deep drift. Getting to my feet, I saw Dan examining the sleigh, its right runner was hope- lessly smashed, and the right tug was broken. Leaving me to unharness Knight, since it was useless to think of returning in our sleigh, Dan walked toward the house, the can in his hand, and the little cur bounding and yelping behind him. The door was opened, letting out a Hood of light and warmth, and making outdoors seem darker and colder than ever when it closed, for the moon was hidden by heavy clouds and the wind blew in threa.tening gusts. Stamping to bring back some circulation to my feet, I collected the robes and piled them in the cutter, then unharnessed Knight and led him out from between the shafts toward the barn. Pierre Corral's young son soon came running out to tell me in a broken mixture of English and French-Canadian that his father was away from home with the sleigh, and that Dannie'7 had told him to bridle the four-year- old whom they were boarding for a summer visitor in the valley, as we were to ride back. I unfastened the driving reins from Knight's bit, replacing them with a shorter length of rope, and we led the two horses out of the barn, where Dan awaited us with the kerosene. Pierre, holding the bridles while we scrambled up, handed us the heavy can fastened by its handle to a pole, of which each of us grasped an end. Thanking the boy, and promising to return his horse on the morrow, we started back up the mountain against the wind. Snow had begun to fall, and now it drove against our faces like stinging hail, mlaking them burn and freeze at the same time. We had borrowed a lamp, but on finding that it frightened the horses as it swung back and forth, had been forced to leave it at the farmhouse, and trust to Knightis knowledge of the roa.d to guide us home. ' If we had had time enough to walk, it might have been a great deal easier to keep the horses together, but as it was, we had to force them into a canter and with continual urging make them stay side by side. An hour, and the time for the in- jection would be past! What if that life went with it! This thought, though 62 l936 THE CHATHAMITE unspoken, gave me strength and courage to hold to the slippery back with my stiff, cold knees and press my horse on with heels and voice. Many times the pole slipped and we were forced to change places and hands, but at length we reached our gate, and turned in. Before we had gone more than a few paces, the four-year-old faltered, turned and reared, while Knight followed his example, and both of them refused to return up the drive. I lost my end of the pole, and the can dropped into the snow, which was, by that time, badly drifted and very treacherous. Dismounting, I held the horses while Dan walked forward to find out what had frightened them. Presently 1 heard a low whistle, and he returned, covered with snow from head to foot. We oan't get through those drifts, at least the horses can't,', he said. I'll have to take them over the mountain and around by the back way. Can you carry the can by yourself from here PU I nodded, and unfastened the pole. Four gallons of kerosene are not a light weight for a girl of fourteen under the most favorable circumstances and they were very heavy for me in all this snow. The drive was a short quarter-mile long, winding in and out of high cliffs Hlld precipices, and well sheltered from the wind, and it formed an ideal cradle for snow. The drifts were so deep and soft that I sank to my thighs in them at every step, and would have lost the can had I let go of its handle. At length I saw a lantern ahead, swinging back and forth and lighting a pair of long leather-covered legs on skis. I shouted, and Father answered. He had become worried by our long delay and the fall of snow, and had come to meet us. Mother is betterf, he said as he swung me up onto his shoulder and picked up the kerosene in his left hand. She passed the crisis safely, and if this injection is on time, will soon be on the road to recovery. We entered the house, lit only by the fire downstairs a.nd a candle-end in the sick room. As the lamp was filled and lit, its strong rays fell on a group of hopeful faces around the bed. Instrumients gleamed, the patient breathed softly and regularly, and downstairs the old cuckoo clock chimed eleven. -RUTH MARY PENFIELD, '36 63 I 9 3 6 THE CHATHAMITE THE CALL OF THE LOON Sad beauty is remembered, strangely, hauntingly, a fragile cobweb of the mind. It lingers in the dimness asleep, waiting until some sound or feeling comes on unseen wings across time and night to touch the cobweb, tighten the silver threads, ring like silver music. Years ago, when he was a child With strange lost eyes and curly hair, she used to sing to him. They were alike, there in the firelight, the girl with her dark Indian beauty, the child with his light curls. The tall whispering pines rose behind them dropping hard brown cones on the needled Hoor. Indian pipes sprouted between the old trunks in clumps of weird beauty. The waters lapped in the cove, deep green, hinting of stariish with coral points down among the rocks, of seaweed sighing as it rose and fell with the tides, of a lone heron deep in the shadows, with secret beauty folded in his wings. But such gentle beauty was not a part of the Indian girl, with her wild, dark eyes and blue-black hair. She was strangely a part of the wild eerie ery of the loon, far out over the misty lake at night. That ery that was so utterly unreal, ghostly, lost. She loved the harsh, haunting notes that came across the water to us sitting by the fire. I remember her listening-the child listening, and then turning to each other in secret understanding after the ghostly call had died in fading echoes between the mountains. Something strange existed between these two, mqy child and the Indian girl. Something stranger than silence and older than mountains masked in moon- light, bound them together. A feeling deeper tha11 words, a shadow on silver. Tonight, I feel strangely alone, lost in this hunirning city. My boy has grown into a man and has forgotten the shadow on silver and the lonely call out over the lake. The Indian girl has faded back into the silent forest, with her wild, dark eyes to Wander among the ghostly Indian pipes and hear far through the trees the sad ery of the loon. Might I have heard it then? Lonely, sad, lost, like eyes of a little child, yet strangely old and alone. I do not know. Perhaps the beauty of a northern wilder- ness is reaching across the city roofs to my tired, lonely mind. Perhaps I hear a bird crying out over the water, lost in moonlight-perhaps it is the horn of a taxicab rushing aimlessly down below. -PATRICIA GRANT, '36 64 1936 THE CHATHAMITE ONE SATURDAY NIGHT The center of the beer garden was always noisy at night, full of lights and sounds and nioving pzople. They were young people, who laughed and joked and danced. Swinging cords of light strung above them caught iiashes of colors on the girls' dresses, now hidden, now displayed by the darker forms of the men. There were shouts mixed with the hard tinkle of heavy glasses. Every 110W and then some of them would burst into song, rocking with laughter and overturning glasses with carc- less movements. Outside this ring of light was shadow and quiet. Here the older people came to sit and drink, and it was here that Frederick and I came every Saturday night to our same old table under the big tree. From its shadow and renzoteness we could look out at the dancing circle as from some long distant spot. We watched what went on as interested, yet detached, gods from another world. One night in May we sat there, resting ourselves in the soft breeze which rustled through the leaves and gently brushed our foreheads. Light glittered on the steely steins and dove in long lines through the dark beer to the depths of the cups. Then it dropped to a softer tone on our faces and the changing folds of our clothes. It was a night for confidences, and the noise of the dancers had made Frederick reminiscent. He was often so on such nights g the chatter of young people brought old memories back to him. Looking at his brooding face in the half-light, at the gray eyes that were watch- ing some far-away happening, I knew of what he was thinking. He was my best friend, as I hope, and have always believed, I was his, and I think I understood him better than anyone else on this earth. I knew that behind the cheerful smile that was never long absent from his eyes he hid from the world something that few people ever managed to see. VVhen German peasants were rushed into a war which they did not even under- stand, there was one young boy who stared with wilder and less understanding eyes than his comrades at the turmoil around him. His lips were thin and straight as he marched into line. The wide eyes grew duller and duller until finally they seemed to lose all expression and could only stare with blind dismay at a crazy world. For a year he stood the marching and the hardships. For a year he obeyed crisply shouted orders, drank, ate, and slept like a soldier. But it was always with the same uncom- prehending eyes. His comrades could not understand him. He was so different from the rest, often staring off into space as though he saw something he couldnit quite reach. He thought too much, they said, and, with a shrug, forgot about him in the uncertain life of soldiers. Then suddenly one day they noticed a new look in his eyes. It was an eager look, as though the thing he hadnit quite been able to grasp were coming closer. He would spend hours away from the others, watching the passing clouds in the sky. or a strea.m bubbling over tiny stones. Day by day he seemed happier. His troubled look disappeared, and he began to join in the conversations of those around him. For a month he was this way. Then, just as suddenly as he had begun to take a new interest in life, he disappeared. A deserter, a. coward, they said. That boy was Frederickis son and now, even after the war was over and most of its scars healed, the boy was forever in his father's mind. It was the laughter and 65 1936 THE CHATHAMITE talk of young people that made him remember, and looking at the dancing forms on Saturday night he would wonder at what might have been. So it was that, seeing his absorbed expression, I kept silent, watching the moving shadows on his face and waiting for him to speak. Frederick liked talking to me of his son, for somehow, better than anyone else, we two had seemed to understand the strange boy a11d his deep thinking ways. There was a louder crash of music from the band and Frederick looked up as though awakened from his dream of the past. It was on a night like this that John said goodbye on his last leave, he said. I remember how we laughed when Margaret tried to sew up his pants leg, which hc had ripped climbing levees. He never could keep still, and at every twist he ripped out all the work she had done. But Margaret kept following hin1 from one room to another, sewing a bit every time he kept still for two minutes. It was a beautiful piece of work just the same, and John said Margaret should be in the army where she could sew on buttons while he made forced landings. It was fun that night .... 7, While he talked, I realized more forcibly how attached he had been to the boy. When John was just a small lad he had even then seemed different from other boys, and Frederick and I used to have long conversations about him, It was at such times that Frederick unwittingly showed how his failure to understand his son weighed on his mind. Every action, every expression John made Frederick would watch, thinking perhaps sometime to see a little of what went on in the childish mind. It was a very complex mind, and I thought then, as I do today, that the boy was cut out to be a great man. Frederick, being more practical than I, could never see that, but he did wish, more than anything else in life, to understand his son. I think the father could almost have reached his goal-I doubt if anyone could have wholly understood him-if he had had l1is son just a few years longer. Perhaps that was the reason why he bore the loss of this son so much more heavily than the death of any of his others. Perhaps that was the reason why tl1e very weight of it had aged him so rapidly and made him but a feeble, crippled old man long before his contemporaries. I don't know, but I felt as we talked that night that Frederick was very old, at the end of a long life of waiting for something that had never come. There was a loud burst of laughter at the next table and, looking up, I saw that several people, whom we had not noticed before, had reached quite a gay stage of their party. They were noisily demanding louder music and more lights. That meant an end to our peace that night. Slowly we finished our beer, listening with the license of old age to their conversation. One man, a large, puffy individual, was relating some escapades of the war. One would scarcely have given him credit for such activity and I found myself watching with amusement, wondering just how much he was taking from his own head. His partner did not hesitate to show her boredom, but the oblivious voice droned on and on. No amount of tactful changing of the subject could deter him and finally even Frederick and I, with nothing else in the world to listen to, found ourselves yawning in each other's faces. ' I suggested leaving, for we soon found it tiresome once the big parties of the night had started, and we called for our check. As we did so the monotonous bore at the next table began on another story. Speaking of German industry,', he said, taking a long drink of beer, I once found at most curiously misplaced example of it during the war. It was some sewing on an old pair of trousersf' Y I could see a smile twitch the woman's lips at the introduction of such a subject into the hot-blooded tales of the stout man. I felt glad that she had a sense of humor to help her through the evening. it ee 1936 THE CHATHAMITE I was running through a lot of old uniforms trying to outfit myself. They were all the most impossible sizes and in all conditions of disrepair. One of them had had the leg torn almost all the way up and had bcen mended so that at first I didn't notice it. On looking more closely, I was astonished to see how perfectly every thread had been woven back into place. It almost looked as though the cloth were whole E The man paused dramiatically at this startling climax and looked at the woman beside him as though he were the discoverer of America.. Now isn't that one of the-'i The voice drawled on, but I didn't listen. A strange look in Frederickis burning eyes had told me with a shock of what he was thinking. Such pitiful childlike trust can only come again with age, and Frederick's face told me that he had crossed the line. Did you take the suit? the woman asked, for conversation's sake, I suppose. Heavens no, there was hardly enough of the coat to make a whole suit. I needed one to cover, not to breathe through? I looked at Frederick fearing to find just what I did. It was an old, old man who looked at me. He seemed to be staring through me, far oil' into a world of his own. The waiter came then and I sorted some coins from my pocket. When I looked up, Frederick had risen and was standing timidly by the fat man. Harsh light fell on him, outlining his old, stooped shoulders and grey head. It cut deep lines down his wrinkled face and he looked old, horribly old. A shaking, blue veined hand dropped on the talker's shoulder and he looked up. Could you tell me-did it come from the front or the back ? The man looked puzzled and then smiled. Why the front, of course,', he said. All true Germans' coats arc hit in the front. and he looked very pleased at this bit of adeptly put patriotism. Frederick said something so gently that I could 11ot hear it and then turned away. The man gazed curiously after him. I wanted to tell my friend that it was too trivial a coincidence upon which to pin his faith, but he was walking rapidly and was at the gate before I caught up to him. Once out on the dark, cool road, I took his arm, but he appeared not to notice me. He was talking to himself, and from the few words I caught and the happy look on his face, I knew that to him, anyway, John was no longer a mystery. There was nothing there for me to say. After all, coincidences are not made by man. And if just a word can end a life happily, what is it to man whether it be the truth or not? The gay noise of the beer garden died away behind us, the woods along the road were quiet and mysterious, and I began to feel sleepy. Life is long and hard, I thought, looking at Frederick's work-worn face, but it is worth living. Would I go through it again? Yes, a thousand times. I smiled g maybe I was getting old, too. -FRANCES MUNSON, '37 67 1936 THE CHATHAMITE WAITING ROOM The gold letters on the door seemed to spring toward him, eager to announce the names they formed-Richard Page, M. D., and two smaller ones beneath, those of his assistants. He walked steadily forward, opened the door rather apologetically, and slipping off the dark gray felt hat which he had pulled down over his eyes, halted before the desk of an efficient young lady in a dark skirt and frilly blouse which seemed oddly out of keeping with a doctor's office. Your name ? She spoke swiftly, with a strained note in her voice, as if she had asked that question so many times that she could not be quite sure of her own. Jonathan Stone. I have an appointment with Dr. Page. I see. Well, you will have to wait your turn, 'I'm afraid. All these people have appointments. toof' She smiled automatically, but already her mind was on some- thing else. Jonathan sank into o11e of the polished wooden chairs which always seem to adorn a doctor's office and looked about him. He saw a long room dotted with drooping palms and long mirrors. He shifted slightly, to avoid seeing his own face, and looked at the others who were waiting. Across from him sat a patient woman in black, relieved only by one-white cuffs and collar. Her little boy played beneath her feet, his long thin legs in brown leggings, and l1is bulbous head. with the watfrv eyes peering confusedly from behind thick lenses, giving him the appearance of a spider. Even when her child hung onto the leg which she had crossed and almost upset he , she gave no sign. Only when the girl at the desk called another name did she start, and then sink back to her thoughts. Jonathan watched her, wonderinfr, for in the depths of her eyes hc saw an utter blankness. When the girl at the desk called. Mrs Archer, Dr. Page will see you now, she only rose, and placing her feet carefully with the toes pointing straight ahead. she moved toward the inner room, with the strange little figure scuttling after her. Suddenly Jonathan shook. The pain had come back to him. It kept him so busy that he was aware of no'f'hing until Mrs. Archer came out again. staring straight ahead blankly, and walking: carefully, always followed by the child in brown. The door swung slowly shut with a wheeffing expulsion of air. Jonathan thought it sounded like a sigh of regret that the door could not be slammed. A door which can be slammed grates on people's nerves, however. and this was a place where nothing must irritate or annoy. Jonathaifs eyes went from the long low table covered with month-old copies of Time tWhat a stupid name! People did not want to be reminded that time was passing did they? They did not want to know that they were getting oldl. of Fortune, and of T710 L't107'll7'll Dinext, to the water cooler, where an occasional drop fell i11to the narrow shelf below the tap with a depressed splash. to the reproduction of Turner,s Venice hanging above a large arm chair. Jonathan was almost in a panic. He felt trapped, betrayed. His inner knowledge of his own symptoms taunted him, and it was only by a determined effort of his will that he concentrated his attention upon the old man who sat beneath the Venice. He saw a pair of brown shoes which could have done with a shine, faultlessly creased dark blue trousers and coat, spoiled by the spots which their ownf-r had made no effort to rem-ove: and a rich tie, bearing the label of Christmas presenti' quite plainly to Jonathan's eye. He saw. too, the stubby fingers, with -nails bitten to the quick, and the ceaselessly moving head with its loose eyes. Worst of all, he saw abject fear in the eyes of the man. lt was so naked, so bestial, thatdonathan for very shame turned his own eyes away. as l936 THE CHATHAMITE Mr, Wyck, you may go in now. The girl's voice cut a silence of gathering tension. As the old man jerked himself across the floor, Jonathan looked away, and saw his own face in- the mirror. Young, healthy, but weak in the mouth and chin, he thought. Bemused, he stared at his own reflection for several minutes. He barely saw Mr. Wyck come from the office. He was too fascinated by the discovery he had just made. The look in the old man's eyes was crystallized i11 his OWII. He sat motionless, petrified by his own conviction. ML Stone, Dr. Page will see you nowf, And, rising slowly, Jonathan walked through the inner door. -BETTY BRANCH, '36 1 FRIENDSHIP We all live in a world that is peculiarly our own and no one clsels. It is with a pang of fear that we realize that no other person sees exactly thc same sights we do, or hears the same sounds. Truly, each man in the world is alone. Our real life is within ourselves in a realm that is only apparent to others through our own words and actions. Our physical selves surround like prison walls that spiritual being that is essentially us. What a miracle it is when from another's eyes we catch a gleam answering some thought or mood of ours! That is friendship in embryo, and from it develops a new and strange fellowship of the spirit. Mere acquaintance holds none of' this inner closeness. Such friendship is a rarity, although its name is misused to designate a multitude of relationships. It is that suddenly born unity with another soul that creates for us a 11ew world in which we do not Walk entirely alone, but in the darkness feel the touch of the hand of one who we know would go with us always along our way if he could. This friendship follows our life,s pathway with a love that is as deep and as sound and as true as some running river, broad and clear, flowing surely and swiftly over a sand of pure gold. Although there are rocks in its course, big black boulders and sharp jagged slabs, its waters still flow 011 svietoriously overcoming each attempt to obstruct it. Only a white foam remains on its crest where the rocks jut out as a mute sign of struggle and of pain, and on it Hows, this river. Many and 'varied are the meadows it runs between. Through storm and calm. However great a thickness of ice may encrust its surface, beneath, the waters flow still, deep, and sure. Dark or light change it not. There is something of eternity in its course. Such is the love of friends. What then is friendship, more than the meeting of two souls drawn to each other out of life's commonplaceness into a communion and a oneness that does not die, hui lives and grows stronger always? JPRUDENCIC Siurrn, '36 so l936 THE CHATHAMITE ASEARCH He went seeking an answer to the secret lo11gi11g of his soul. First, he begged counsel of the wise men, but they understood him not and told him he was foolish. Yet one old seer who knew the courses of the stars and all their meanings bade him search for the path that leads to the edge of the earth. There, if he were indeed earnest, he might find an answer to his seeking. He set out on foot and traveled far. The people in the towns he passed were kindly folk and gave him lodgings for the night. But they laughed when he asked the road to the world's end and told him he were wise to return whence he came. He thanked them a11d went on. He passed green meadows where cattle grazed, deep forests where sunlight never came, through high mountain passes, and broad valleys with slow-moving rivers, always he faced towards the setting sun, and his purpose was steadfast. At last after many months he found it, the path that leads to the end of the world. It was a faint track, little trodden, and leading over a barren moor. The wind moaned bleakly, and the sun had gone. The clouds flowed quickly through the sky, as though fearing some evil power of that place. He followed it, small hands seemed to hold him back at every turning and silent, noiseless voices prompted him to turn and flee if he still valued life. Twice he turned to Hy and turned back again and continued on. He came, at length, to the ending of the trail. And here was a sheer preeipice to which he saw no foot but clouds. There were steps leading down, old as time and narrow. They twisted perilously down the face of the cliff, it would be a bold man who dared the descent. But he had courage and he ventured. He descended slowly, clinging to the rough rock, for if he looked down he would grow dizzy, slip, and fall. He reached the foot, and fou11d himself on the margin of a lake. On every side rose steep cliffs faced with pinesg the sky seemed infinitely far and untouchable as though seen from a deep well. The grass underfoot was mossy green Hlld stretched to the water's edge. The air had a bluish tinge of perpetual twilight. There was a hushed stillness as though no human thing had seen that lake for centuries gone by, but all around there seemed to dwell those supernatural beings who, driven from their haunts on earth, had found a refuge here. On the further shore stood a castle scarcely visible in the dimness. There was a boat on the grass, he stepped in it a11d floated out on the water. It was crystal clear like a glass, and mirrored in it he saw the ever shifting glimpses of men's dreams. Some were brightly colored and happy, visions of things that had been and glad days to come. Others were somber-hued and frightful, foreshadowings of guilty consciences. The boat moved slowly of its own accord and landed gently 011 the grass before the castle gate. The stones of its walls W6l'0 gray with age, older than the world itself. And the ivy which clung to them appeared to be part of the stone and mortar. The windows were dark slits half hidden by the leaves. Moving back and forth across them he saw weird lights as though unseen eyes were watching him. The rusted gate swung open with a muffled clang as he approached. He passed through the deserted courtyard into the castle. Here he found himself in a long, dimly lighted hall with closed doors on either sideg he continued straight on until he reached the massive 70 1936 THE CHATHAMITE doorway at the farthest end. It opened when he reached it klllil showed him a chamber so large it seemed to have no ending. The air was blue with incense which rose like smoke to the vaulted ceiling far aboveg the only light penetrated through long windows stained like blood. The illumination they gave was diifused and faint, so that he saw everything as through a mist. There was a dais before him and on it a throne, but who sat there he could not see. He asked that for which he had come, and she spoke, What you would know I may not answer. Go your way and it will come to you, perhaps in the peace and solitude of a eloudless summer day, perhaps in the rush and turmoil of a city. But if you are fit, it will come, the substance of a falling star and of the blue haze of hills. Slowly he turned to go, but lest he should remember the way he had come and the things he had seen he was made to forget. He woke on the moor and turned home. Of what he had done he knew nothing, but of that which he had sought he knew. -ANN DoNA1.nsoN, '39 - WIND The wind that howls and laughing shrieks Cannot be made by God's kind hand, But rather by the souls of trees The groping gnarled roots of which Can neither reach the sun nor moisture in the earthg But strangle men in lower worlds And scream and laugh and kill again. The ghosts of souls from twisted trees Come out and hang above the soil And rise and dance and tear away Our solemn peace and happy thoughts, And bear them off to lonely moors In pits and bogs where bones are strewn, And there destroy our minds and bring Us home in semblance not unchanged But with a soul of shrivelled form The other parts of which will fly About the earth and mock at us And bid us come to them. -GERTRUDH POTTER, '37 T1 1936 THE CHATHAMITE TH E CALEN DAR FALL TERM-1935 Sept Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. 23, Mon. 24, Tues. 25, Wed. 28, Sat. 29, Sun. Oct. 2, Wed. oct. 5, sat. Oct. 7, Mon. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. N ov. 10, Thurs. 12, Sat. 13, Sun. 17, Thurs. 19, Sat. 20, Sun. 24, Thurs. ac, sat. 30, Wed. 2, Sat. A few old girls arrive to help receive the new girls. New girls, feeling very new, encounter Clapple before having time to get homesick. Banquet for new girls before old girls take possession. New girls are further confused by a treasure hunt, but food and singing by J inny Prout and the waiters soothe all. The Service League is explained. Chatham. rejects her usual customary adherence to Emily Post in mad tearoom scramble. It is probable that this early training was the only thing that later saved Miss Jones when she came in contact with the hard brown earth. New irls retaliate with excellent revue starrin Carroll Mont- ff 9 l . y , 8 gomery s voice and Miss Montague's whistle. Gold and Purple Teams chosen amid much cheering in Willis Hall. The Welbournes talk on Japanese Baths and the Japanese. Purples tickle the old gold humor in funny swimming meet, and incidentally win it. Lecture by Mr. J. Ralph Wilbur on Historic Homes and Gyardens of Virginia. Inspiration for gay quip lacking. We learn the exact number of Sewing Machines in the U. S. from Mr. H. M. Douty, a11d at his request rack our brains to call from vague babyhood memories the good old days of President Hoover. Unseemly reaction by even the most dignified produces a promise from Dr. Lee that it will not happen again. Dr. Roth's lecture on Alaska. You have your pick of La Argentina and a cheese sandwich, or Possums and ice cream. Reposing ,gracefully upon the famous lounge rug, we enjoy the first of Miss Andrus's lovely recitals. The Dramatic Ulub in today's assembly makes a successful debut, featuring Marcia Williams, Libby Warriner, Ruth Mary, and Betty Branch in My Lady's Lace. The more courageous of us stay to brave the Chamber of Horrors, an offspring of Ann Ely's morbid. genius, while the rest flee with Mrs. Bray to Historic Virginia. Parge finds herself between the Devils and the Deep Blue Sea, and chooses the James, as did her ancestor Pocahontas. fNote to Miss Hensleigh: is this a Dominant or Recessive characteristic?j Classification out. The School Life Department finds a new way to be useful in cheering Cis and D's. In assembly, Bunny with a foreign accent and Clay with a British one betray each other convincingly in The Queen's Messengervg then we are cheered up by Hart, Grant, Williamson, Willcox, and Prout in And the Light Went Out. Ellen Vale is taken into the Riding Club. 72 l936 Nov Nov Nov Nov. Nov Nov Nov. Nov Nov Nov. Nov. Nov Nov. Nov Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. 9, Sat. 10, Sun. 11, Mon. 12, Tues. 15, Fri. 16, Sat. 17, Sun. 18, Mon. 19, Tues. 20, Wed. 21, Thurs. 23, Sat. 28, Thurs. 30, Sat. 2, Mon. 4, Wed. 7, Sat. 8, Sun. 10, Tues. 11, Wed. 13, Fri. I 9 3 6 THE CHATHAMITE Miss Miller's Recital. Dr. Wood addresses us at Service League meeting. Kit Stevenson comes down and is inveigled away to a picnic, and then to washing Miss Corbieres car. The more emotional of us go to Smilin' Thrui'-and those of us who were not emotional before soon were. J eano, upon hearing of a proposed trip abroad next summer, jumps up and down so violently that she sprains an ankle. Cornelia Otis Skinner and our customary cultural cheese sandwiches. Official, though smoky, housewarming in the Pine Room. Ebby! The first of Ely's series of church faints. A pig on the front lawn gives visiting families a strange impression. The Monday Ride runs off and leaves Mr. Brush in the lurch. The exclusive literary club is born and Betty Branch unanimously declared president. We raise the roof with One More Month -Mrs. Lee is faintly disapproving. A senior privilege finally materializes in the form of luscious cin- namon toast and cocoa on Thursday Afternoon. The Glee Club, under Miss Hope Millerts able management, gives us a delightful recital. The whole school hums Oh Shenandoah for weeks afterwards, particularly Miss Hensleigh's version. We enjoy Thanksgiving in a most unpuritanlike fashion with a scavenger hunt and a barbarous underground feast of red-hot Brunswick Stew. The sophisticated Importance of Being Earnest brings us back to civilization, though the savage crops out i11 Ely's kick at Bentley. The Thanksgiving dance furnishes conversation for the next two weeks. The Seniors look their worst for pictures. Santa and Mrs. Santa appear a bit prematurely but very dramati- cally, and collect fabulous sums for stockings, World Outlook Bazaar-and many Christmas shopping problems are solved. T. Alvin Russel tells of his interesting negro' school at Laurence- ville. Ruth Frick's philanthropic tendencies are revealed in the Service League cabinet reports. Miss Anne Wiggin gives us an inspiring talk on her work with foreign students. Mary Dykenia, in pursuit of cleanliness, turns the hot water spigot a bit too far. The result is a geyser calling for Mr. Rainey's quench- ability. Dorothy Nalle, on the floor below, who thought she was taking a bath, finds out it is only a shower. Chatham Hall limps down to supper, as a result of wearing rubber boots all afternoon. Mrs. Poaguc protests violently against the mud in the halls. 73 THE CHATHAMITE Dee Dee. Dec. Dee. 14, Sat. 15, Sun. 17, Tues. 19, Thurs. Dec. 20, Fri. The Seniors really feel like Seniors, now that their flashing gold rings have come, although a little doubtful as to the significance of the stork. The Dance Club gives its first recital amid overwhelm- i11g applause, and we all feel that we definitely have genius in our midst. The Christmas pageant in tl1e Church. Dotty Nalle, as the Virgin Mary, takes our breath away, and the music is lovely. Bang! Crash! and the trunl-is are down! A really superior Chathamlite comes out. Willis Hall reeehoes with the sound of childish voices and the patterings of tiny feet. It's the Christmas party. Bentley Booth with a chimney, specially made for what shook when he laughed like a bowl full of jelly. One or two new girls are surprised by the beautiful Christmas carols in the halls at night, and We all love them. Home! What more can we say? WINTER TERM-1936 Jan. 6, Mon. Jan. Jan J an .lan Jan Jan. Jan Jan J an Jan J an Jan. Jan Jan. Feb. 11, Sat. 13, Mon. 14, Tues. 17, Fri. 18, Sat. 20, Mon. 21, Tues. 22, Wed. 23, Thurs. 24, Fri. 25, Sat. 26, Sun. 28-31 31, Fri. 1, Sat. Everybody mournfully returns, except for a few privileged char- aeters. The night of the well-advertised baby party arrives. My! My! how we have grown ! ' Hollister, Hays, Hoyt and Hoyt are taken into the riding club Holesale. The Study Hall was painted kllld it smelt, so C's and D's joyfully adjourn to their rooms. Heavens! The whole school goes astronomical or are they only after points? Dr. Palmer lectures on paintings. Dizzy vs. Sweetbriar Genius in dish Tray Controversy. What'll it be next, Dizz? First Senior Breakfast Gorge. Wefre old enough to know better. Miss Loveland steps nobly into a breach caused by a well-known Lee characteristic and leads an extemporaneous chapel. Group leaders give a birthday party for Mrs. Lee. Apoligizin' fer th' interruption, Ma'am but the Playg0ers with Williamson, Cowles, Hart, Derrick, Van Alstyne, Choate, Du- Charme, and Meier is today in assembly. Vienna Boys' Choir i11 Danville. Brewer Eddy tells us of his shady money transactions in Russia. What if everyone did that, Brewer? Bishop Oldham, along with some excellent advice, gives us the inside dope on.F. D. R. and King George, The faculty have a holiday while we have exams. Cally and Polly Wig come and a burst of enthusiasm sweeps the school. . We have a very Dramatic day, what with Mutiny on the Bounty, starring Laughton, Tone, and Gable, at the movies, and in assembly 74 l936 Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar Mar. Mar Mar Mar Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. 2, Sun. 5, Wed. 7, Fri. 9, Sun. 12, Wed. 15, Sat. 16, Sun. 19, Wed. 20, Thurs. 22, Sat. 27, Thurs. 29, Sat. 1, Sun. 3, Tues. 4, Wed. 5, Thurs. 6, Fri. 7, Sat. 13, Fri. 15, Sun. 16, Mon. 21, Sat. 26, Thurs. 27, Fri. 1936 THE CHATHAMITE Miss Civilizationf, The Beau of Bath, and Minuet,,, starring half tl1e Dramatic Club. Sally Ferguson, Hollister, and Olivia Birekhead celebrate their first anniversary. lt's a good excuse for a good party. Mr. Jim Wilson laboriously shocks us all i11 l1is Free Wheeling Through Africa. Snow. lt takes three men to dig out Woodle. Miss Charlotte Nevin speaks about tl1e Y. W. C. A. Student Council 1l1CIlllJGI' hears great giggling after lights, rushes d0W11 hall to find Morgan's bed full of feathers, arranged by Foraker and Hathaway. Morgan shakes sheet Hllll feathers go- poof! all over Second Pruden. Stude11t Council member tears llilll' and adds to the general fluffy mess. Dr. Ellsworth speaks 011 the Age of Queen Anne. Dr. Ellsworthis much-quoted lecture 011 Manners.', I guess we needed it. Helen Taylor is elected to tl1e Student Council. Mrs. Clemons's l1101l0lOgl1GS. Browning brought home to the Seniors as never before. George Washington's birthday supper, our first real movie, William Tell, and movies of ourselves that send us to bed happy. A very much appreciated surprise, Dr. Lee. The Divine Nelson. All the women of Virginia clamor to hear him, and Clifton forgets the gas. The French Play. Because of her acce11ts, Sarah Rapalje,-reads the English Resume. We catch a word or so here Elllll there, and grasp, at least, the swoons of Potter and Cowles, and, best of all, the Fletcher itch. Prout a11d Danforth give a11 excellent piano recital. The most exciting day of the year! Bunny is elected May Queen with Booty as Maid of Ho11or and Kath first lady of the court. More excitement-Weezy is taken 011 the C. A. C. ' Mr. Dolmetsch and Miss Bloch freally Mrs. Slllltllj entertain us i11 the good old Elizabethan Style. A brief half-hour of the Hampton Quartet's perfect harmony. The Dance Club gives an inspired recital with Elmina the creator a11d rescuing hero, and Kitty King as the peacock. We get our faculty advisers. Better late than never. Dr. Lee gets slugged i11 the nose by the mail-bag as it is 'thrown OE the train. Ncrw we have a real complaint. . All evening of astronomy with Professor A. M. Harding and of ape men with Buster Crahbe. Chatham makes tl1e fro11t page by a Twister. A The long-looked for Mikado at last comes off, wistaria and all, and is wonderful. The 116W vacation song lacks the vigor of tl1e old one, but we plough through it in loyalty to Dr. Lee and Clapplegate. Home again. IO THE CHATHAMITE SPRING TERM-1936 Apr. 6, Mon. Apr. 11, Sat. Apr. 12, Sun. Apr. 18, Sat. Apr. 23, Thurs. May 2, Sat. May 5, Tues. May 9, Sat. May 31, Sun. June 2, Tues. June 6, Sat. June 7, Sun, June 8, Mon. June 9, Tues. Spring Vacation ends and the greater part of us comes back on time. Chatham institutes a new tradition, the half-holiday in honor of the brilliant old girls. We secretly wonder what has gotten in to the old school while we thoroughly enjoy the telescoped classes, free time, egg hunt, picnic, and movies. Easter Sunday turns out to be a beautiful day. Alumnae Day. We have picnic lunch outdoors so that the Alumnae can be properly fed inside, and wonder why they donit give the Alumnae the picnic lunch, because it is so much more fun. Willis Hall is dedicated. We have special sports to impress them and the Mikado', is given again, even more successfully. The Venetian Glass-Blowers perform miracles for us. The Maker of Dreamsi' in assembly with Julia Foraker and Ginny Prout as Pierrette and Pierrot and Louise Dorrance, the manufac- turer. Also the Wonder Hat with Edith Cowles, Rust, Winslow, Montgomery, and Dykcma 5 and Wild N ell-the Pet of the Plainsw or Her Final Sacrifice. Mr. Franks and his dog, Buddy, give us a lecture about the wonder- ful work being done by The Seeing Eye? May Day. First, the Drill and the Tournament in the meadow. Later, we caper about in strange costumes with gay abandon in front of Bunny and the May Court. Bunny makes a perfect queen. And then the Dance with its usual excitement. Final meeting of the Service League with election of 11ew otlicers. Final exams begin with the usual groans. The Horse Show proves very exciting. There is the usual last minute rush for points before the Athletic Banquet. The Seniors ill caps and gowns march into church to hear the Baccalaureate sermon preached by Bishop Edwin Penick of North Carolina. The new Service League ofhcers are installed at the beautiful candle service in the outdoor chapel. The lantern service is at night. Class Day. At night the Dramatic Club gives The Man Who Mar- ried a Dumb Wifef' starring Betty Branch, Janet Gregory, and Ann Orr, with an excellent supporting cast, Choate, Prout, Liggett, Williams, DuCharme, and Kneeland. And at last the long-looked-for and the much-worked-for Com- mencement-and we are sorry. We listen absorbed to Professor Stringfellow Barr of the University of Pennsylvania deliver the address, we clap enthusiastically when the honors are given, and we wish all the time for the final moment to be delayed when we step out into the wide, wide world. 76 1936 , fif 1 45 if f? N . . .. .. S ,E K , . ,,h. .. 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C- ,qz 3: 1 ,. , 'Li -' A 0000000000004vifmwbor vO1,vlOOO0f'OCri0000002vlUO0lOOf'lOOOl0lvW'flwOfKOo0OOf1l0lUOmvwH00012000000000001WOOUCOOCIK'Ir lm www -Q4 'cfm' sl wg, in to000000loloaososolototo000000to00000OlO000OIOlO0000Uololol000OOnotoso00000OIOIOOOOUQOCOQOOOOOOOUOIOOQOQQOQOOOOQOOOOUDG' r ADVERTISEMENTS .700OOMOOOOOOOUO00OOOIUOOIOIOIOOOOOOQQOQ00O0O0U000000OuOOO0DOIf,'0090000f10QOOOOOUOOOOOOOOOOO'3O00w0rX0Q0r -0-'nr mmm vm Ofriwm vm 1 OOOOIOOOOOOOOOOOIOIOOOOOOOOOOOUOlo:OloOO0OlOOO0O0ClOI00O0O0O0OOO!00000to00OOOO00000OlOIOlOUOIOOOCOOOOQIOOQIOOOIOUommolu PINE LOG CAMP in the Adirondacks LUZERNE, N. Y. Fon GIRLS 8-is ALL SPORTS HORSEBACK RIDING Catalog furnished on request DOROTHY GRAY BALDWIN Chatham Hall, Chatham, Va. FRANCES G. KINNEAR 52 East 52d St., New York City The Little Studio 248 Milburn Street Rochester, N. Y. We make a Specialty of Decorating School and College Rooms Evelyn Goodwin Fon Member ot tne American Institute ot Decorators Jne Engel, Inc. GOWNS Madison Avenue at 80th Street NEW YORK Wx WW HELEN Z. STONE Incorporated I2 EAST 38th STREET ,W SCHOOL AND COLLEGE OUTFITTERS , -X -. N COMPLIMENTS OF E R. WILLARD Q S RMAN . u I BLEND I IIUIFIFIEIE X' 0.2200 THE HOUSE FRESH ROASTED DAILY AT CHICAGO AND BROOKLYN TSPORT BUILT 2 llS'l' 12:0 ST N!! VOIK. ll. mau:MUnnAYmu. 2 - am Coffee Merchants for Over 50 Years -M' SEXTON D FOREST HULBURD HULBURD JOHNSON A W WITHROW F J YOUNG S J SMITH G M BENSON -.fx N YkSt kEhg NwYkCbA Mb N YkPdEhg M be' ew or Chico o kEch g St Chicago Board f T Winnipeg Grai E h g Hulburd, Warren 81 Chandler STOCKS-BONDS-GRAH4 COTTON O 208 SOUTH LA SALLE STREET Suite 996 Telephone State 9760 CHICAGO if CALL 49 l .W . SALE and SERVICE CHA-I-HAM Storage, Washing, CLEANERS Greasing Chatham, Virginia BENNETT MOTOR COMPANY Chatham Virginia We guarantee our Service Telephone Number 3 for Drug Store ond Postol Telegraph Service Electric Shoe Shop TELEPHONE 1 80 CHATHAM SATISFACTION PHARMACY . J. M. JONES, Manager E. M. POOLE M ager CHATHAM VIRGINIA Chatham Virginia TIRES, TUBES AND ACCESSORIES I We Use Genuine Ford Parts SALES SERVICE CHATHAM MOTOR COMPANY, Inc. Chatham Virginia H. O. GLASS RADIO COMPANY Atwater Kent-Philco Accessories-Repairs Chatham Virginia HOTEL CHATHAM The Seminole Trail U. S. 29 Main Line Southern R. R. Rooms with Private and Connecting Bath Excellent Food Go To MUNDY3 FRUITS, GROCERIES and Stationery Supplies 9 Chatham Virginia J I. OVERBEY Er SONS Wholesale and Retail HARDWARE Chatham Virginia ALL THRU LIFE FOODS ARE IMPORTANT TO HEALTH Quality Is Always First at PENDER3 MODERN FOOD MARKETS VIRGINIA-NORTH CAROLINA IHTZ THEATER CHATHAM VIRGIN IA WELCOME AWAITS YOU MAY WE SHARE IN YOUR I PURCHASES FOR TOILET ARTICLES ' ADVERTISERS THOMPSON DRUG COMPANY Chatham Virginia Phone I2 WHITEHEAD BROS. FEED, SALE AND EXCHANGE STABLES O Dealers in COAL, WOOD, BRICK AND SAND Chatham, Va. KITTY, DUTCH Cr HUNT Appreciate Your Patronage SODAS, COSMETICS, DRUGS WHITEHEAD'S PHARMACY Chatham Virginia BELK-LEGGETT BOOTH'S COMPANY DRUG STORE DanviIIe's Largest Department Store I Good Place to Shop DANVILLE, VIRGINIA Hotel Burton Bldg. C DANVILLE, VIRGINIA We appreciate your patronage BROWN JEWELRY , Compliments COMPANY Danville Enterprise, Inc. Manufacturing and Dispensing Opticians operating 0 CAPITOL DIAMON DS-PEARLS RIALTQ SILVERWARE BROADWAY Main Street Danville DANVILLE Serving Chatham Hall since I9l9 DAIRY PRODUCTS CO. Incorporated 0 Institution Supplies Paper Products Confections Manufacturers Represent g th of Nation's B t FAULTLESS Ice Cream and Butter . HAMLIN 6' HAMLIN MANUFACTURERS' AGENTS WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS Danville Virginia Danville virginia WHEN IT'S FLOWERS CALL CHARLIE OR JULIA AT GILES FLOWER SHOP 631 Main Street Danville Virginia PHILIP GREENBERG INCORPORATED WHOLESALE AND RETAIL MEATS AIIATTOIR1 UNION STREET EXTENSION PHONE 408-409 Office and Storage Plant PINE STREET AT FIVE FORKS DANVILLE, VA. GOING TO DANVILLE, VA.? Welcome to HOTEL DANVILLE MODERN FIREPROOF ' Every Room with Bath Tub or Shower ' Rates from 52.00 sing ' Good Food ' Garage Opposite le W. G. MALONE M WELCOME CHATHAM HALL To FACULTY AND STUDENTS PATTERSON DRUG COMPANY WHO KNOW Masonic Temple SHOP AT DANVILLE, VA. PARKER'S ' Chatham Hall Headquarter When in Danville O Danville Virginia Dependable Drug Store Serv ff 5 '15,-Q4. g 'z4 'A hi Ei 5 wh A A N ri ,,,,:. ' l l vw., , .qv.. . A,...i as 5, Pc 'ff4 -1'4-AV,2 :,,:' 4.A. My , ' if fl YOUR STRONG SU IT No matter what it is . . . swimming, golf, tennis, canoei , '19 or horseback riding . . . we can supply the casually correct costume for it. We have everything for summer activities, from the most slimly tailored of sports frocks to the sheerest of afternoon dresses. If you play your hand well, which presupposes shopping at Herman's, you cannot lose! L. I1 Ii ll M A N 'fanudlezv 73as'z' .5'I0zt R. B. RODGERS CLEANERS and DYERS SUNSHINE LAUNDRY DANVILLE VIRGINIA BEST WISH ES FOR THE CHATHAMITE TATE 6' THOMAS COMPANY, Inc. Danville, Va. O Wholesale Distributors of POCAHONTAS Canned Vegetables and DEL MONTE Fruits J. T. TOWNES PRINTING COMPANY Established I897 PRINTERS-RULERS BOOKBINDERS Office Supplies and Equipment II4 nd II6 South Unio S I' Opposite Masonic Templ Danville, Va. BARKER-JENNINGS HARDWARE CORPORATION WHOLESALE ONLY Lynchburg Virginia L. E. LICHFORD PRODUCE-FRUITS Jobber in Products of Every Fruit Producing Country in the World FANCY GROCERIES 200 ORANGE STREET Opposite Union Passenger Station Lynchburg Virginia The Best Bread Makes the Best Toast 220 and HONEY KRUSHED WHEAT BREAD for Health JUDGE FOR YOURSELF O LYNCHBURG STEAM BAKERY, Inc. Lynchburg Virginia BEST WISHES TO CHATHAM HALL The STRAUS COMPANY Incorporated Richmond Virginia W FASHION-WISE MISSES F i 'fi I' jf? SKS I-I U RRY TO 9 CINE IIIUIZEIEBS IN LYNCHBURG for LAST-MI NUTE STYLES BELLWOOD FOOD PRODUCTS For Institutions Distributed by Incorporated hmond Virgin . H. WILLIAMS 6' CO. ,Wx Compliments of the FRESHMAN CLASS 5- R COMPLIMENTS OF TI-HE SOPHOMORE CLASS COMPLIMENTS OF THE JUN IOR CLASS r-x ,, K BELL uh TLZELL A 1 -i?i lHlH2fZ f2fQ2'g. MADE ll: ' ' '-'--- - ' THE IMPRINT0 PRIDE Bids for patronage on a basis of price alone get small response from people who know the true Worth of good quality in PRINTING. They prefer to pay the slight difference in the cost of good printing over mediocre printing be' cause of the vastly superior RESULTS obtained -and RESULTS, of course, are paramount. BELL MADE ANNUALS are produced by skilled craftsmen to meet the most exacting requirements. But, measured by the standards of real service and satisfaction, they are, after all, the least expensive. J. P. BELL COMPANY, Inc. 816 MAIN STREET - - LYNCHBUR6, VIRGINIA HONORS RECEIVED IN JUNE fThe Board of the Chathamite suggests that the following blanks be filled in so that the record you will have of the year 1935-1936 be completej MEDALS Rector s Medal ...............,...... 7 Sherwood Dramatic Medal ....................... Junior and Senior Scholarship Medals ........ LITERARY AWARDS Senior Essay Medal ,..................................... Best Prose and Poetry i11 the Ohathamites ......., SECOND SEMESTER HONOR ROLL RIBBONS TO INNERS IN THE HORSE SHOW lw1nll.l7lilml1umr1Ttl:x1fmwalj ..........................,.. ATHLETIC HONORS Teams Basketball Varsity Baseball Varsity Cups Presented to Winners of I , , I Tennis Singles..l!!illl.Ll'!l ..: ....................................... . 9 Tennis n0ub1es.tlam.llMml...f.fllloin..llullmewA.... n..n.n ni inn.. . n n nn r Badminton .... A..,he.y...il ..., E lizmllxonm ..... Swimming ..EiA'llnh..ron'mKu! ...... Cups Presented to P Captain of Winning Soccer Team..LflKl..ClM'!.: ..... Captain of Winning Hockey Team ................................ f' Captain of Winning Basketball Team.lll0l' . QL Q Q l Captain of Winning Baseball Team... i!Xl...1tSAX'L...... Team Winning Greatest Number of Athletic Contests Highest Individual Scorer..HlllLl...nl1Um.A ....... Girl Showing the Most Improvement ............. Placque to Winning Team Autogmphs gf., V.- A, . X... N . 1 .,-fn 1 L I . 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